Book description
Over 8 million women stayed at home during the Second World War and
their story has never been told. Using brand new research from the
Mass-Observation Archive, Jennifer Purcell brings to life - in all its
tragedy, pathos, joy and fear - the lives of six ordinary women made
extraordinary by the demands of war. In their diaries and notes they
record the inner thoughts and everyday activities as they tried to
survive come what may.
Nella Last, the archetypal housewife struggles between the
demands of her husband and her desire to help the war effort.
Cambridge-educated, middle-class Natalie Tanner sneaks out to the
cinema whenever possible and discusses politics in town, leading a
leisured life while others try to scrape by. Saddled with a draughty
and unwieldy centuries-old home directly in the path of German bombs,
Helen Mitchell constantly tries to escape the war and her domestic
life. Opinionated and patriotic Edie Rutherford uses the war to escape
the home and go to work. Alice Bridges endures the horrors of the
Blitz on her home town of Birmingham and finds a new and exciting
social life as she reports the war for Mass-Observation. Housebound
for most of the war with debilitating arthritis, working-class Irene
Grant struggles to keep her family fed and dreams of a better Britain.
Intensely moving and personal, each woman reveals their most
secret fears and hopes, as well as the everyday problems of wanting to
contribute to the war effort, keeping a house together under difficult
circumstances, the travails of rationing, work and volunteering,
whilst maintaining their duties as wife and mother.
Jennifer Purcell redraws a new, emotional and unexpected history
of the Second World War as it was experienced by those left behind,
the domestic soldiers.