Richard Overy
Once More unto the Breach
Britain’s War: Into Battle, 1937–1941
By Daniel Todman
Allen Lane 827pp £30
In the opening pages of this book, the first volume in a monumental new history of Britain’s experience of the ‘long’ Second World War (the second volume will cover the period 1942–7, ending with Indian independence), Daniel Todman presents his own personal links to the world of the war through which his grandparents lived. This could have been a rather sentimental journey, but Todman tells their story with a light touch. What becomes clear is how his grandparents’ generation wanted to put the war to one side and get on with their lives after 1945. It has been up to the second or, in this case, third generation to come to grips with history, strip it of its remaining myths and try to answer the question of why the British people put up with six years of bombing, rationing, high taxes, military failures, separation and loss.
Todman explores every aspect of the British experience of the war (though he is perhaps lighter on wartime culture and intellectual life than he might have been). The style is reminiscent of the new narrative approach to modern British history pioneered by David Kynaston and Dominic Sandbrook, rich in telling
Sign Up to our newsletter
Receive free articles, highlights from the archive, news, details of prizes, and much more.@Lit_Review
Follow Literary Review on Twitter
Twitter Feed
Alfred, Lord Tennyson is practically a byword for old-fashioned Victorian grandeur, rarely pictured without a cravat and a serious beard.
Seamus Perry tries to picture him as a younger man.
Seamus Perry - Before the Beard
Seamus Perry: Before the Beard - The Boundless Deep: Young Tennyson, Science, and the Crisis of Belief by Richard Holmes
literaryreview.co.uk
Novelist Muriel Spark had a tongue that could produce both sugar and poison. It’s no surprise, then, that her letters make for a brilliant read.
@claire_harman considers some of the most entertaining.
Claire Harman - Fighting Words
Claire Harman: Fighting Words - The Letters of Muriel Spark, Volume 1: 1944-1963 by Dan Gunn
literaryreview.co.uk
Of all the articles I’ve published in recent years, this is *by far* my favourite.
✍️ On childhood, memory, and the sea - for @Lit_Review :
https://literaryreview.co.uk/flotsam-and-jetsam