Army Girls: The secrets and stories of military service from the final few women who fought in World War II
Autor Tessa Dunlopen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 apr 2022
'You'll feel the shock of finding these amazing characters are still among us - I was gripped from the first page' - Jeremy Vine
Army Girls is the intimate story of the final few women who served in World War II and are still alive to tell their tale. They were female soldiers in a war Britain wanted to fight without conscripting women. It was a vain hope, by December 1941 for the first time in British history women were called up and a generation of girls came of age in khaki, serving king and country. Barbara trained to drive army-style in giant trucks and Grace swapped her servant's pinafore for battledress and a steel hat, Martha turned down officer status for action on a gun-site and Olivia won the Croix de Guerre in France.
Commemorating the 80th anniversary of conscription for women, Army Girls captures remarkable stories from the last surviving veterans who served in Britain's female army and brings to life a pivotal moment in British history. Precious memories and letters are entwined in a rich narrative that travels back in time and sheds new light on being young, female and at war.
Uniquely this moving Second World War memoir is embedded in the present day. Written in the midst of a global pandemic, the parallels and paradoxes between two very different national crises are explored in a book that honours the women who fought on in extreme youth and now once more in great old age.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472282118
ISBN-10: 1472282116
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 126 x 196 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Editura: Headline
Colecția Headline
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472282116
Pagini: 384
Dimensiuni: 126 x 196 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Editura: Headline
Colecția Headline
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Recenzii
The thrilling, gripping and often painfully moving voices of those women who served alongside men in the Second World War - but were never called soldiers because they were women. Tessa Dunlop captures with verve, sensitivity and humour the indomitable spirit, the hardships and the emotion of these young women, many of them sheltered young girls, thrown overnight into the brutality of total war.
Wise, witty, compassionate and personal: Tessa Dunlop writes just the best kind of history about women.
You'll feel the shock of finding these amazing characters are still among us - I was gripped from the first page.
A fascinating and joyful read. It brushes aside simplistic myths about World War 2, uncovers the forgotten stories of women who served on the front line and makes us see British women's experience of war as it must really have been - messy, intense, sometimes absurd and very often heroic.
It's been marvellous to read
Army Girls... is an extraordinary insight into the women who served in the Second World War.
[a] moving account of 17 surviving veterans... Dunlop has brought the female military experience to life
There were 290,000 women who supported the army in the ATS during the Second World War. Army Girls lets their voices shine through, and is the perfect tribute to the lives and achievements of these women.
A brilliant, moving and at times funny book.
very compelling... All of the interviewees seem to be speaking from the heart
Dunlop's voice as a narrator emerges throughout the book: the interviews and letters mingle and interact beautifully with the author's insights on gender, class and race.
Army Girls is an intimate and unique story of the final few women who served in World War II and are still alive to tell their tale. They were female 'soldiers' in a conflict that Britain wanted to fight without conscripting women. It proved a vain hope, by December 1941 for the first time in British history women were compelled to join the war effort and a generation of girls came of age dressed in khaki, serving king and country.
Barbara trained to drive army-style in giant trucks and Grace swapped her servant's pinafore for battledress and a steel hat, Martha turned down officer status for action on a gun-site and Olivia won the croix de guerre in France. Joan saw what war looked like for losers in 1945 Germany and Daphne still misses her school friend who died in action aged eighteen.
Capturing the incredible true stories from WWII's biggest female military force - the Auxilliary Territorial Service - and the oldest - the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry, Army Girls is about belonging and resilience, life and death. Army Girls like Maud, Vera, Jean, Betty and Nanza share precious memories and letters in a narrative that travels back in time and sheds new light on being young, female and at war.
More than any other oral history focused on the veterans of WWII, this book is bedded in the present day. Written in the midst of a global pandemic that has shaped the final furlong of these women's lives, there are both parallels and paradoxes. This book honours those women who fought on both in their extreme youth and now once more in great old age.
Wise, witty, compassionate and personal: Tessa Dunlop writes just the best kind of history about women.
You'll feel the shock of finding these amazing characters are still among us - I was gripped from the first page.
A fascinating and joyful read. It brushes aside simplistic myths about World War 2, uncovers the forgotten stories of women who served on the front line and makes us see British women's experience of war as it must really have been - messy, intense, sometimes absurd and very often heroic.
It's been marvellous to read
Army Girls... is an extraordinary insight into the women who served in the Second World War.
[a] moving account of 17 surviving veterans... Dunlop has brought the female military experience to life
There were 290,000 women who supported the army in the ATS during the Second World War. Army Girls lets their voices shine through, and is the perfect tribute to the lives and achievements of these women.
A brilliant, moving and at times funny book.
very compelling... All of the interviewees seem to be speaking from the heart
Dunlop's voice as a narrator emerges throughout the book: the interviews and letters mingle and interact beautifully with the author's insights on gender, class and race.
Army Girls is an intimate and unique story of the final few women who served in World War II and are still alive to tell their tale. They were female 'soldiers' in a conflict that Britain wanted to fight without conscripting women. It proved a vain hope, by December 1941 for the first time in British history women were compelled to join the war effort and a generation of girls came of age dressed in khaki, serving king and country.
Barbara trained to drive army-style in giant trucks and Grace swapped her servant's pinafore for battledress and a steel hat, Martha turned down officer status for action on a gun-site and Olivia won the croix de guerre in France. Joan saw what war looked like for losers in 1945 Germany and Daphne still misses her school friend who died in action aged eighteen.
Capturing the incredible true stories from WWII's biggest female military force - the Auxilliary Territorial Service - and the oldest - the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry, Army Girls is about belonging and resilience, life and death. Army Girls like Maud, Vera, Jean, Betty and Nanza share precious memories and letters in a narrative that travels back in time and sheds new light on being young, female and at war.
More than any other oral history focused on the veterans of WWII, this book is bedded in the present day. Written in the midst of a global pandemic that has shaped the final furlong of these women's lives, there are both parallels and paradoxes. This book honours those women who fought on both in their extreme youth and now once more in great old age.