by Martin Wainwright (Author)
The twentieth century saw two world wars and countless other conflicts whose effects on society have been well documented. Here you will find the less familiar story of how these international struggles managed to reach into the quietest corners of the British countryside. From Battle of Britain vapor trails looping over summer cornfields and affecting local hawks and waterfowl to the lone ringed bird who limped in from invaded Czechoslovakia, diarists note down and discuss the momentous changes wrought by wars on British country life. Women and children fetching in the harvest as their menfolk fight in Flanders. Italian prisoners of war singing opera in Herefordshire orchards. Mobilizing the Women's Institute to make jam for the war effort. Beautifully written and subtly observed, these rediscovered treasures reveal how for all its soft beauty, Britain's rural landscape has been shaped, in part, by man at war with man.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
Edition: Reprint
Publisher: Guardian Books
Published: 05 Mar 2009
ISBN 10: 085265121X
ISBN 13: 9780852651216
Book Overview: A poignant collection of archive pieces from the Guardian's perennially popular 'Country Diary'.