

David Nicholls sold over a million copies in the UK alone with his 2009 novel *One Day*. The book traces the lives of Emma and Dexter on the same date over twenty years, capturing the intimate arc of a friendship and missed romance. Its success was not a sudden phenomenon but the culmination of Nicholls’s sharp ear for dialogue, honed through years as a television screenwriter for shows like *Cold Feet*. The novel’s structure is often mistaken for a simple romantic gimmick; in practice, it is a rigorous study of character and the quiet tragedies of time. Nicholls’s work continues to define contemporary British fiction about ordinary emotional lives.
1965–1980
The latchkey kids. Raised during divorce, recession, and the end of the Cold War. Skeptical, self-reliant, media-literate. They invented indie culture, grunge, and the early internet — then watched the Boomers take credit.
David was born in 1966, placing them squarely in the Generation X. The events that shaped this generation — economic uncertainty, the end of the Cold War, and the rise of personal computing — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1966
#1 Movie
The Bible: In the Beginning
Best Picture
A Man for All Seasons
#1 TV Show
Bonanza
The world at every milestone
Star Trek premieres on television
Voting age lowered to 18 in the US
Iran hostage crisis begins; Three Mile Island accident
Michael Jackson releases Thriller
Apple Macintosh introduced
Black Monday stock market crash
Dolly the sheep cloned
Twitter launches; Pluto reclassified as dwarf planet
Donald Trump elected president; Brexit vote
“Love is finding someone who makes your loneliness feel less lonely.”