Have you read the previous volumes (Austerity Britain and Family Britain)? It's all one long book (Tales of a New Jerusalem), planned to take the story up to 1979. I think it's utterly brilliant, but then I'm British, and lived through the period covered. I'm not sure how it would read for a younger and/or non-British audience.
No, I'm only aware of Modernity...but it looked interesting enough, and I'm somewhat of an Anglophile, so...maybe I'll flip through it some more to get a better feel for it.