Media Reviews
Virginia Nicholson gets us closer than we have ever been before to the complicated day-to-day reality of women's lives during that still controversial decade, the 1950s -- David Kynaston
Nicholson handles her material with confidence, sympathy and, ultimately, optimism that for most women things have improved, so that the abiding emotion is not gloom but, in my case, admiration for my mother's generation and gratitude that it was so much better for ours * Daily Telegraph *
Nicholson uses vivid contemporary sources and oral testimony to show the constraints under which so many women lived. Like David Kynaston's Family Britain . . . Nicholson has the same knack of seamlessly piecing gripping individual stories into a panorama of ordinary life * Sunday Times *
An important and humane book of female social history . . . In this work, Nicholson musters voices to profound and deeply political effect. Much of the material in this book will be familiar to women over 55: we were born into this world. For younger women, though, Nicholson's book should be necessary reading, to remind them how far we have travelled. -- Melanie Reid * The Times *
An uplifting and heartwarming read * Stella *
Nicholson spells out the contradictions of this era so well: a new world dressed in old clothes * Indendent on Sunday *
Remarkable. To today's young, it'll sound like life on another planet * Daily Mail *
The achievements of the women in this book haunt us and move us to admiration * Guardian *
Insightful social history. Mixing research with a wealth of anecdote, Nicholson brings history to vivid and touching life * Mail on Sunday *
Poignantly illustrates how the women of the 1950s yearned for the innovative technology of the era to liberate them from repetitive drudgery -- Victoria Coren Mitchell * Observer *
Indefatigably researched, moving and perceptive, Nicholson handles her wide-ranging material with sympathy, humour and a lightness of touch. Her enviable gift for interpretation and storytelling is balanced by first-hand accounts of those women of the 1950s, their youth so relatively recent, who have trusted her with the intimate details of their lives * Spectator *
There is certainly warmth in [Virginia Nicholson's] curiosity as she delves into the stories of her mother's generation . . . Nicholson's judgements are rightly and often amusingly sharp . . . Her skill as an interviewer leaves her subjects revealing long-kept secrets and her flair as a writer makes us care about these young women and what happens to them -- Lara Feigel * Observer *
Richly detailed. We hear from women working as air hostesses, housewives, biscuit packers, prostitutes, academics, models, secretaries and Buttlin's Redcoats. We discover how women felt entering beatuty contests, having to give up work on marriage, being defined by their husband's jobs, becomming unmarried mothers, enduring racism, marching against nuclear weapons and desiring other women. Nicholson's own commentary, in turns compassionate and wry, holds everything together * Independent *
A fascinating look at the lives of ordinary women in 1950s Britain * Sunday Times *
Meticulously researched * Big Issue in the North *
A ground-breaking book, richly nuanced with titbits of information, insight and understanding * Daily Mail (on 'Singled Out') *
Remarkably perceptive and well-researched . . . Virginia Nicholson has produced another extraordinarily interesting work, sensitive, intelligent and well-written * Sunday Telegraph (on 'Singled Out') *
An inspiring book, lovingly researched, well-written and humane . . . the period is beautifully caught * Economist (on 'Singled Out') *
The popular image is of a world where women wore little frilled pinafores with immaculately coiffed hair and happy smiles as they dusted, swept and baked . . . But Nicholson's book reveals a much darker side of life * Telegraph, Best Non-Fiction Books of 2015 *
Gripping, constantly surprising: a page-turner. We hear at first hand the life stories of women from different walks of life, from factory workers to debs. Each story draws you right in and it's always a wrench to move on -- Country Life