Its Wilco's only UK club gig and my son Louis bought me tickets for my birthday. New album out now.
Louis' band The Lieutenants Mistress are competing in the Green Man Festival band competition. Vote for them here [you have to register].
An alternative news and ideas channel on art, science, culture, politics and the environment, by freelance journalist, magazine editor and author John May.
Its Wilco's only UK club gig and my son Louis bought me tickets for my birthday. New album out now.
Louis' band The Lieutenants Mistress are competing in the Green Man Festival band competition. Vote for them here [you have to register].
Left: Aung San Suu Kyi, Burma. 16th July 1995. She is currently on trial.
Ever since we posted up the Intro to the 1970 BIT Travel Guide - and the story got picked up by Slate, interest has remained high.
Pleased to receive recent feedback this week from one of its original users, Richard S. Erlich, who writes: 'I probably bought it in a bookshop in California before departure, or was given it along the way by a returning traveller. I am now searching around to find a copy to read again.
'Legend has it there a frayed original BIT guide is
somewhere in northern Thailand, so i am rounding up the usual suspects to see if I can find it and, ultimately, scan its best parts, including its introduction, and text on Kathmandu and Goa.' [Above: Coneheads, China. 1980s]
Richard is a foreign correspondent, photojouralist and author, who has been reporting from Asia since 1978. 'As you'll see from my website, once I read the BIT guide I travelled to Asia and have lived here happily ever since. Am now in Bangkok'
Left: US troops, Bagram, Afghanistan. Dec 2001
You can find his excellent reportage and details of his book here.
Check out his photos on Flicker
FOR MORE ON BIT SEE ALSO PREVIOUS POST:
Strang how things happen. A friend tipped me off to an article Fom Here to Divinity in the Sunday Times by writer and novelist Tim Lott which begins:
AN INDEX OF POSSIBILITIES: THE BACK STORY
The late 1960s/early 1970s were a time of considerable social turmoil, of experimentation, of protest – above all, of new thinking. Millions of young people across the world were searching for new ways of living, in building a counter-culture in opposition to the establishment.
In the USA, The Whole Earth Catalogue (a huge counter-culture publication of alternative
information, tools and lifestyles, produced by Stewart Brand) sold a million copies and we were originally commissioned by Oliver Caldecott and Dieter Pevsner (bless their cotton socks) of Wildwood House in the UK to produce 'The Great British Catalogue' along similar lines, in the hope that we could emulate that success.
[There's a lovely memoir of Wildwood House on Elain Elkington's blog. Scroll down and look for Alternative London: TEST and Wildwood]
So a small group of four of us set off down that road but it soon became clear that the book we were seeking to produce was growing into something very different.
One important aspect of this change of perspective was our discovery of modern science and our interest in finding ways of popularising science. In this we were ahead of the times. For instance, the New Scientist at that time was still a stodgy black and white journal. Omni, the first pop science magazine, funded by Bob Guccione, wasn’t published until 1978.
Our aim was to try and encompass the breadth of what we saw at the time as a new revolution in thinking in a series of five volumes that took broad general themes – Energy & Power, Structures & Systems, Communications, Down-To-Earth Life and Survival Facts, and Inventions,
Discoveries, Explorations, Games containing cross-referenced information from not only many areas of science but also mysticism and religion - to form a new kind of encyclopedia for a new age, which we named initially The Catalogue: An Index of Possibilities. The sub-title took over.
When the book was signed up by Andre Schiffrin of Pantheon Books in New York, he likened us to the French Encyclopediasts who, between 1751-1772, produced twenty-eight volumes of their Encyclopedia, which captured and embodied the spirit of the Enlightenment.

The Team: (Back) George Snow and Richard Adams (designers) with John May (centre); (Middle) Michael Marten, Nadine Seton, Lee Torrey; (Front) John Trux, John Chesterman
The first volume, a monumental effort by an eventual main team of 10, working together for more than two years, was widely celebrated at the time of its publication in 1974 as a unique book, not only for it’s the broad sweep of its written content but also the verbal and visual style in which it was delivered.
We described it thus: ‘The huge range of subjects is presented thematically, using feature articles, biographies, chronofiles, quotation and psychodramas to achieve an effect which combines the feel of an encyclopedia with elements of magazines, wonder books and comics.’

A huge factor in the book’s success was the superb original design layout by Richard Adams and George Snow and the more than 50 original illustrations, comics and diagrams.
Our background in the underground press meant that the layouts were slightly anarchic, and that the book was irreverent, iconoclastic and laced with an in-house humour.
ILLUSTRATIONS: Aleister Crowley by Edward Bell; the opening picture for the Mind section by Bill Sanderson; diagram of the Spectrum by John Chesterman.

During the book’s production, our office at 2 Blenheim Crescent with its giant round table and huge library, catalogued according to a unique classification system based on Roget’s Thesaurus, became a mecca for druids, dowsers, airship builders, particle physicists, ecologists, alternative technologists, healers of many disciplines, Sufis, scientists and sages of all denominations. 'Future Shock' author Alvin Toffler came round for tea, Oxford dons invited us for supper, Chrissie Hynde tried to steal on of the first copies.
The book was finally published in 1974 to some hoopla.
Arthur Koestler called it: ‘A promising experiment in coping with the information explosion.’
The Evening News said it was ‘perhaps the most remarkable paperback yet produced.’
Bill Butler in Time Out called it ‘one of the best alternative books to come out of Britain to date.’
Features appeared in The Times by Caroline Moorhead and in the Sunday Times by Philip Oakes.
Ronald Fletcher, in an extensive review entitled ‘Shock and Engagement’ in the Times Education Supplement wrote: ‘An index of possibilities it is – punching, provocative, unpretentious, alive, extravagant – but always seriously engaged…It is, above all, alive to the complexity and challenges of our time. It is comical, outrageous, provocative, frightening.’
In fact, Volume 1 was to be the only completed work; eighteen months into Volume Two we had to throw in the towel and put our energy into a new project – Worlds Within Worlds – the first popular book to capture a wide range of scientific imagery – which sold widely, was serialised in the Sunday Times magazine, won an award from the New York Academy of Sciences and led directly to the foundation of the Science Photo Library, which for the next 30 years continued to supply publishers and publications worldwide with state-of-the-art imagery.
The Index sold well on its first publication, an estimated 60,000 copies in the UK and US and in addition I believe there was an Australian edition. A measure of its success was not only the reviews and sales but also the continuing correspondence and compliments we received from all over the world. The Index touched a chord with many.
In the subsequent years, the cult of the Index has continued to grow. Original readers are now reporting that their young teenage sons and daughters are equally intrigued by the book’s style and content. Second-hand copies are rarer than hen’s teeth and pricey. So much for the past.

Photo: Angus Forbes


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'John was a truly great author, an undisputed expert on ‘Earth mysteries’ and a keen student of esoteric lore and legend. Though he covered a great many topics in his widely acclaimed books, he was most famous, of late, for his work on ‘sacred architecture’.
He worked hard to reveal the hidden numerical patterns that inform the grand design and which, strangely, can also be found in the shapes and positions of sites and structures that are sacred to the ancients.'

