Life in wartime London evokes images of the Blitz, of air-raid shelters and rationing, of billeted soldiers and evacuated children. These are familiar, collective memories of what life was like in wartime London, yet there remains an often neglected area of our social history: what was life like for teenagers and young people living in London during the Second World War? While children were evacuated and many of their friends and family went to fight, there were many who stayed at home despite the daily threat of air raids and invasion. How did those left behind live, work and play in the nation's capital between 1939 and 1945? Using the diary entries of nineteen-year-old trainee physiotherapist Glennis 'Bunty' Leatherdale, along with other contemporary accounts, Life of a Teenager in Wartime London is a window into the life of a young person finding their way in the world. It shows how young people can cope no matter the dangers they face, be it from bombs or boys, dances or death.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
Publication Date: 30 Oct 2017
Publisher: Pen & Sword Books Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781473894969
About Duncan Leatherdale
Duncan is an experienced newspaper and online journalist working in the North East of England. He has a degree in Journalism with English Literature from the University of Sunderland and had been working for the regional press for seven years before joining the BBC in August 2014. 'Life of a Teenager in Wartime London' is his first book. Bunty was born and raised in London one of two children to baker Alfred and his wife Gertrude. After the war she married the navigator of a Lancaster bomber and the pair had two sons. She worked as a physiotherapist and now having retired some years ago lives in Bradford-on-Avon near Bath. Despite having a new hip and being 91 she still drives and enjoys walks and feeding the badgers who visit her garden each night.