A clever, colourful, comparative history showing us that, when it comes to being green, resourceful and eco-friendly, our grannies can show us the way...
Patricia Nicol is a journalist. She was born in Aberdeen in 1971, and brought up in Scotland, the UAE, England and Brazil. She studied English at the University of York and newspaper journalism at Cardiff Journalism School, University of Wales. As a journalist she has worked for the Aberdeen Press and Journal, the Scotsman and the Sunday Times, where she was deputy editor of Culture. She lives in London.
Ambitious and systematic... she has made a serious study of
government-imposed austerity in the Forties
*Evening Standard*
Charming and perceptive romp through the ration books... Much of
the book's fun is in the deft way Nicol weaves together examples of
can-do thrifty propaganda. She has trawled the Imperial War Museum
and the National Archives and come up with some gems
*Sunday Times*
Fascinating slice of social history... With painstaking research, a
good helping of north-east commonsense and glorious illustrations
taken from Ministry of Information posters from the 1930s and '40s,
she demonstrates how this generation could learn a lot from the
self-sacrifice and austerity of the war years
*Aberdeen Press and Journal*
A fascinating book
*Big Issue*
A comparative history of rationing, 'making do' and the
environmentally-friendly lessons we can learn from those post-war
years
*Choice Magazine*
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