'Minutely detailed, accurate, skilfully marshalled and engagingly written, it is quite the best social chronicle of the period I have read.' Spectator
Norman Longmate served in the army in World War II, and then went to Oxford University in 1947 to read Modern History. He subsequently worked as a Fleet Street journalist, as a producer of history programmes for the BBC, and for the BBC Secretariat. In 1981 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and in 1983 he left the BBC to become a full-time writer. Norman Longmate is the author of more than twenty books, mainly on the Second World War and Victorian social history, and of many radio and television scripts on historical subjects. He has frequently been employed as an historical adviser by film and television companies, most recently on the series The 1940s House.
An immense and impressive assembly... Must surely remain an
invaluable essay in the remembrance of things past
*Times*
Superbly detailed and illustrated... From stirrup pumps to Spam,
Norman Longmate's marvellously comprehensive panorama misses
nothing. Excellent
*Sunday Telegraph*
A landmine of information covering every field of civilian life in
wartime from the grandeurs of the blitz to the miseries of dried
eggs and the six-inch bath
*Cyril Connolly*
Much of it is extremely interesting; some of it is fascinatingly
out-of-the-way; and all of it contributes to building up a true
picture of everyday life in England from September 1939 to August
1945
*Observer*
Mr Longmate has recruited an enormous volunteer army of home-front
veterans who sent him their wartime recollections... He has
brilliantly sifted and assembled the precious debris
*Guardian*
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