Book Description
A look at how 'ordinary' people in London and Birmingham lived, worked and coped during World War II, through the diary of an "ordinary commonplace Londoner."
Author : Vere Hodgson
Publisher : Persephone Books
Page : 590 pages
File Size : 40,83 MB
Release : 1999
Category : Birmingham (England)
ISBN : 9780953478088
A look at how 'ordinary' people in London and Birmingham lived, worked and coped during World War II, through the diary of an "ordinary commonplace Londoner."
Author : Jeanette Winterson
Publisher : Open Road + Grove/Atlantic
Page : 192 pages
File Size : 10,88 MB
Release : 2007-12-01
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 0802198724
The New York Times–bestselling author’s Whitbread Prize–winning debut—“Winterson has mastered both comedy and tragedy in this rich little novel” (The Washington Post Book World). When it first appeared, Jeanette Winterson’s extraordinary debut novel received unanimous international praise, including the prestigious Whitbread Prize for best first fiction. Winterson went on to fulfill that promise, producing some of the most dazzling fiction and nonfiction of the past decade, including her celebrated memoir Why Be Happy When You Can Be Normal?. Now required reading in contemporary literature, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit is a funny, poignant exploration of a young girl’s adolescence. Jeanette is a bright and rebellious orphan who is adopted into an evangelical household in the dour, industrial North of England and finds herself embroidering grim religious mottoes and shaking her little tambourine for Jesus. But as this budding missionary comes of age, and comes to terms with her unorthodox sexuality, the peculiar balance of her God-fearing household dissolves. Jeanette’s insistence on listening to truths of her own heart and mind—and on reporting them with wit and passion—makes for an unforgettable chronicle of an eccentric, moving passage into adulthood. “If Flannery O’Connor and Rita Mae Brown had collaborated on the coming-out story of a young British girl in the 1960s, maybe they would have approached the quirky and subtle hilarity of Jeanette Winterson’s autobiographical first novel. . . . Winterson’s voice, with its idiosyncratic wit and sensitivity, is one you’ve never heard before.” —Ms. Magazine
Author : Vere Hodgson
Publisher :
Page : 498 pages
File Size : 16,35 MB
Release : 1976
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN :
Author : Mathilde Wolff-Mönckeberg
Publisher : Persephone Books
Page : 240 pages
File Size : 50,97 MB
Release : 2007
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN :
Features letters written (but never posted) by a 60 year-old woman, to her children living abroad, about the experience of living in Hamburg during the war. Discovered in a drawer in the 1970s, they were translated by her daughter, the late Ruth Evans, and first published in England and Germany in 1979.
Author : Jacqueline Mesnil-Amar
Publisher :
Page : pages
File Size : 11,1 MB
Release : 2015-10-22
Category :
ISBN : 9781910263051
Author : Winifred Peck
Publisher :
Page : 304 pages
File Size : 35,40 MB
Release : 2007-04-01
Category : Home economics
ISBN : 9781903155622
'House-bound' was written during the war and the war is both in the background and foreground: one of the questions that the reader is asked throughout the book is - what is courage? Winifred Peck is also funny and perceptive about Rose Fairlaw's decision to manage her house on her own.
Author : Irene Nemirovsky
Publisher : Vintage
Page : 306 pages
File Size : 41,66 MB
Release : 2010-04-06
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 0307739317
A never-before-translated collection by the bestselling author of Suite Française Written between 1934 and 1942, these ten gem-like stories mine the same terrain of Némirovsky's bestselling novel Suite Française: a keen eye for the details of social class; the tensions between mothers and daughters, husbands and wives; the manners and mannerisms of the French bourgeoisie; questions of religion and personal identity. Moving from the drawing rooms of pre-war Paris to the lives of men and women in wartime France, here we find the beautiful work of a writer at the height of her tragically short career.
Author : Mollie Panter-Downes
Publisher :
Page : 378 pages
File Size : 48,75 MB
Release : 1972-01-01
Category : World War, 1939-1945
ISBN : 9780582101463
Author : Jocelyn Playfair
Publisher :
Page : 288 pages
File Size : 38,12 MB
Release : 2002
Category : Fiction
ISBN :
The great interest of Jocelyn Playfair's book for modern readers is its complete authenticity. Set sixty years ago at the time of the fall of Tobruk in 1942, one of the low points of the war, and written only a year later when we still had no idea which way the war was going.
Author : Olivia Cockett
Publisher : Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press
Page : 225 pages
File Size : 48,13 MB
Release : 2009-08-03
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 1554587395
Olivia Cockett was twenty-six years old in the summer of 1939 when she responded to an invitation from Mass Observation to “ordinary” individuals to keep a diary of their everyday lives, attitudes, feelings, and social relations. This book is an annotated, unabridged edition of her candid and evocative diary. Love and War in London: A Woman’s Diary 1939-1942 is rooted in the extraordinary milieu of wartime London. Vibrant and engaging, Olivia’s diary reveals her frustrations, fears, pleasures, and self-doubts. She records her mood swings and tries to understand them, and speaks of her lover (a married man) and the intense relationship they have. As she and her friends and family in New Scotland Yard are swept up by the momentous events of another European war, she vividly reports on what she sees and hears in her daily life. Hers is a diary that brings together the personal and the public. It permits us to understand how one intelligent, imaginative woman struggled to make sense of her life, as the city in which she lived was drawn into the turmoil of a catastrophic war.