You had to be there. The 1990s saw a huge upheaval of society. Everywhere you looked things were changing, advancing and life shifted into high gear-some of it good, some not so.
In author Henry Carroll’s and Thames & Hudson’s new book: The 1990s A Visual History Of The Decade readers are given a first person, in-your-face, whirlwind tour of the decade than changed everything.
The U.S.S.R. officially ended, the internet came into its own, Apple dominated the desktop computer industry and introduced some startling new products. Computers moved into the home, music was dominated by Grunge, Hip-Hop and Rap, movies tackled subjects and themes never attempted before, the Gay movement made unexpected gains and women started to come into their own in art, music, movies and other forms of the pop culture business.
Reagan left, the Clintons arrived and the world grew smaller as social media and globalization went into full swing. Authenticity was in.
So much happened so quickly that people struggled to keep up. Video games exploded and every aspect of society was affected from the food we ate to the cloths we wore.
In The 1990s all of it is examined and explained accompanied by hundreds of photos single-page, double-spread, black and white and in full-color.
The deluxe hardbound book, with its striking 90s face type in magenta, green and orange against a background of purple, exemplifies the era itself.
I was there, I took part in the insanity and somehow survived. It was a time of change, struggle, readjustment, unexpected occurrences and fast-paced, fun and frantic events.
2 Timothy 1:7 - For God hath not given us the spirit of fear; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind.

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