Born in the
Hampshire village of
Netley, England, Fountain studied Politics at the
University of York (1963–1966), and in 1964 he founded the student newspaper
Nouse. In the 1960s and '70s, Fountain contributed widely to magazines and journals of the alternative press such as
Oz and
Idiot International. In 1981, he was one of 60-plus staff members of
Time Out who, after its owner
Tony Elliott abandoned the magazine's original co-operative principles, left to establish an alternative listings magazine called
City Limits, run on equal pay, with Fountain and
John Fordham as co-editors. Fountain went on to write for other national publications such as
The Guardian, where he was a commissioning editor of obituaries from 1994 to 2009,
The Observer,
The Sunday Times,
New Statesman,
The Oldie,
Evening Standard,
SoHo Weekly News,
History Today, and
New Society. His first book, a novel called
Days Like These, was published in 1985, followed in 1988 by
Underground: The London Alternative Press, 1966–74, considered the most comprehensive survey of the alternative newspapers and magazines that flourished in the UK with the emergence of the
New Journalism. On the reissue of
Underground as an ebook, the reviewer for
New Model Journalism wrote: "As a piece of writing, it is a head-long rush, describing the events that shaped the scene as much as the publications itself. As a giddy fast forward through the years in question, at least for the 'turned on' generation who emerged from the rapidly expanding university sector, it is a vivid picture that Fountain paints. He is also good on the social changes that underpinned the scene – the arrival in London of baby boomers from the US and Australia and a cohort of grammar-school boys who were happy to side step the professions. Writing in the mid-1980s, it is perhaps not surprising that the representation of, and work environment experienced by, women in the alternative print was at the front of Fountain’s mind. Two decades on, the sexual revolution that it appeared to embody, in which women were expected to drop their prudish resistance to male demands, is an embarrassment brilliantly unpicked in this book." In 2002, Fountain won further acclaim with the publication of ''
World War II: The People's Story
, about which Publishers Weekly'' said: "This large and fine illustrated history of WWII through the participants' eyes is far above the conventional nostalgia piece. Personal accounts cover an amazing variety of experiences:
the Blitz and the
Battle of the Atlantic as seen through children's eyes;
Operation Barbarossa from a German tank officer's point of view; the last fight of
the Bismarck as seen from the British
battleship Rodney; and an Australian soldier fighting the Japanese in the swamps of New Guinea….Even more outstanding is the quantity and quality of the photographs, managing to be comprehensive and comparatively free of overdone chestnuts." Other titles of which Fountain has been author or editor are
Lost Empires: The Phenomenon of Theatres Past, Present & Future (2007), two volumes in the series
Voices from the Twentieth Century –
Women at War and
The Battle of Britain and the Blitz – and the 2014 volume
When the Lamps Went Out: From Home Front to Battle Front Reporting the Great War 1914–18. Fountain features in a chapter of
Iain Sinclair's 2009 book
Hackney, That Rose-Red Empire: A Confidential Report. ==Bibliography==