One of the strangest periods in the social history of Britain
was that of the Phoney War of 1939-40, when the nation did not know
quite whether it was at war or peace. E.S. Turner's marvellous
study, first published in 1961, offers a none-too-reverent account
of how Britons tried to adjust themselves to the uncertainties of
those days.
What was a woman to do if the air-raid siren sounded while she
was curling her hair? Were the police required to open fire through
jewellers' windows at un-extinguished light bulbs? What was more
patriotic - to buy War Bonds or to drink as much whisky as
possible? Turner further explores the difficulties posed by
blackouts to private detectives and prostitutes; the impact of the
moment upon morals, and on fashions; and the bureaucracy's
blundering seizure of the nation's spa hotels. The story is carried
entertainingly all the way to the Blitz: the darkening moment at
which Britain realized there was indeed 'a war on.'
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