The Yellow Duster Sisters: A Wartime Childhood

The Yellow Duster Sisters: A Wartime Childhood

by SusanKennaway (Author)

Synopsis

1939. Nine-year-old Susie and her sister Gyll live in Watford and all week look forward to their Saturday shopping expedition to Woolworths, accompanied by their nanny Alice, to buy something nice for Mummy. But as war breaks out across Europe, Susie and Gyll are evacuated to Africa. Alone on a dusty continent, the sisters find little to like about their new way of life and get no sympathy from their guardians, especially devout Aunt Geraldine (or `Dor-dor') who forces them to wear patched-up clothes and be in bed by six o'clock. Feeling increasingly abandoned as the years pass and letters from home stop arriving, the sisters dream desperately of escape and cling fervently to their memories of idyllic England. When they do finally reach British shores, only a few weeks after D-Day, there is no one to meet them at Liverpool Docks. After getting to their father's new home in Gloucestershire, they find a strange woman living with him and gradually learn that their mother has moved away and joined the Polish army. Life only gets stranger when they are sent to Cheltenham Ladies College, where English boarding school life is possibly even worse than their years of exile in Africa. Wonderfully evocative, funny and charming, Susan Kennaway writes about the difficult challenges of growing up during the Second World War with rare honesty and insight. The Yellow Duster Sisters is a moving and unusual exploration of the often ignored, and often destructive, nature of shifting war-time family relationships.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 304
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published: 06 Aug 2011

ISBN 10: 140881210X
ISBN 13: 9781408812105
Book Overview: Two young girls struggle to make sense of their new world in this eccentric and compelling wartime memoir

Media Reviews
'Truthful and touching, this is a memoir that vividly evokes the wartime experience of a young girl evacuated to a strange country, far from home' * Adam Sisman *
Praise for The Kennaway Papers: 'A courageous and a healing book ... It is a reminder of the high talent that was snuffed out by James Kennaway's premature death ... and - almost as an undeclared bonus - it introduces Susan Kennaway as a highly gifted writer on her account. This remarkable book is an unsparing account of old loves and infidelities' * Sunday Times *
'Susan Kennaway writes with a beautiful lucidity and balance, and a rare candour too' * London Review of Books *
'The Kennaway Papers is a remarkably honest yet bleakly anguished book ... For these glimpses and the blazing intensity of Kennaway's work, Susan Kennaway has done herself and the memory of her first husband proud' * Scotsman *
Author Bio
SUSAN KENNAWAY was born in Watford in 1930. At the onset of the Second World War, she and her sister were evacuated to Africa. She was educated at Cheltenham Ladies' College and later at the Ruskin School of Art, Oxford. She married the writer James Kennaway, and they had four children before his death in a car accident, aged forty. Susan married Stanley Vereker on her fiftieth birthday and together they moved to the Tarn in France where Susan restores porcelain and they open their garden to the public for charity. Susan and Stanley have fourteen grandchildren and one great granddaughter. Susan Kennaway is the author of The Kennaway Papers and The Yellow Duster Sisters is her second book.