|
RUTH
ADAM, War on Saturday Week (1937) APPROACH
Though written before WWII
actually began, follows a group of siblings from childhood during World War I
to the outbreak of World War II.
|
RUTH
ADAM, There Needs No Ghost (1939) APPROACH
Humorously contrasts the
reactions of villagers and Bloomsburyites to the Munich Crisis. Reviewed here.
|
RUTH
ADAM, Murder in the Home Guard
(1942) WARTIME
Mystery set during the Blitz, full of interesting details and
perspectives on the war. Reviewed here.
|
RUTH
ADAM, A House in the Country (1957) POSTWAR
Just after the war, a group of friends try living in a run-down manor
house in Kent, with mixed results. Reviewed here.
|
MABEL ESTHER ALLAN, Time to Go Back (1972) RETROSPECTIVE
Tale of a young girl in Liverpool who travels back in time to witness
her mother and aunt’s tragic wartime past.
|
MABEL ESTHER ALLAN, Tomorrow Is a Lovely Day (1979) RETROSPECTIVE
Teenage girl, orphaned in the Blitz, recovers in the English
countryside.
|
MABEL ESTHER ALLAN, A Strange Enchantment (1981) RETROSPECTIVE
Sixteen-year-old girl joins the Land Army.
|
MEA ALLAN, Change of Heart (1943)
WARTIME
Imagines the Allies winning WWII only to find Nazism regaining ground.
|
ROSE
ALLATINI, Family from Vienna (1941) APPROACH
Set during and after the
Anschluss among an assimilated Jewish family in London who take in refugee
relatives from Austria.
|
ROSE
ALLATINI, Destination Unknown
(1942) WARTIME
Deals with a large Jewish
family in London, some of whom are refugees now working as domestic helpers.
|
ROSE
ALLATINI, Blue Danube (1943) WARTIME
Traces a Jewish family over
several generations, ending in London during World War II.
|
MARGERY
ALLINGHAM, Traitor's Purse (1941) WARTIME
Campion novel set during the phony war; part mystery, part wartime spy
thriller.
|
MARGERY
ALLINGHAM, Coroner's Pidgin (1945) WARTIME
Campion tracking art thieves during the war, while Lugg keeps a pig in
a bomb shelter as his war work.
|
MARGERY ALLINGHAM, The Tiger in the Smoke (1952) POSTWAR
Campion in the London underworld of the immediate postwar years.
|
LUCILLA
ANDREWS, One Night in London (1979) RETROSPECTIVE
LUCILLA ANDREWS, After a Famous Victory (1984) RETROSPECTIVE
LUCILLA ANDREWS, The Phoenix Syndrome (1987) RETROSPECTIVE
LUCILLA ANDREWS, Frontline 1940 (1990) RETROSPECTIVE
Pressured to remove wartime themes from her early novels, romance
novelist Andrews returned to the war in these late works. Her powerful memoir
No Time for Romance provides her
real-life experiences.
|
MARJORIE
APPLETON, Anything Can Happen
(1942) WARTIME
Novel about a domestic servant
conscripted into work in a munitions factory.
|
HELEN
ASHTON, Tadpole Hall (1941) WARTIME
The
story of "gentle, retiring Colonel Heron and his home,
Tadpole Hall, the leisurely tradition they both represent and the incursions
which war brings."
|
HELEN ASHTON, Joanna
at Littlefold (1942) WARTIME
Two
women left alone by the war make their way in a country town in England
during the Blitz. Published in the U.S. as Joanna. Reviewed here.
|
HELEN
ASHTON, Yeoman's Hospital (1944) WARTIME
Entertaining
melodrama set at a village hospital during wartime.
|
HELEN ASHTON, The Captain Comes Home (1947) POSTWAR
A man missing in the war and presumed dead suddenly appears and is
charged with assaulting his wife's new husband.
|
HELEN ASHTON, The Half-Crown House (1956) POSTWAR
Very much a novel about a house, with lush details of its past and
present, it's also a novel about the scars the war has left behind. Reviewed here.
|
BERYL BAINBRIDGE, The Dressmaker (1973) RETROSPECTIVE
Set
in Liverpool during the war, this novel focuses on a young woman living with
her two aunts.
|
DOROTHY BAKER, Coast Town Tapestry (1946) WARTIME
Described
in a blurb as "a novel with a wartime background."
|
KITTY
BARNE, Visitors from London (1940) WARTIME
Barne's most famous work, about evacuees on a Sussex farm.
Reviewed here.
|
KITTY
BARNE, We'll Meet in England (1942) WARTIME
Wartime
adventure about two children from Norway escaping to England by boat.
|
KITTY
BARNE, While the Music Lasted
(1943) WARTIME
Sequel to Barne's She Shall Have
Music (1938), which follows her heroine through her musical studies and
into romance. Set late 1930s into the war. Reviewed here.
|
KITTY BARNE, Enter Two Musicians (1944) WARTIME
Set in the world of music in the thick of World War II.
|
KITTY BARNE, Three and a Pigeon (1944) WARTIME
Children's adventure featuring two bombed out children staying in a
country home.
|
KITTY
BARNE, Musical Honours (1947) POSTWAR
Family tale about musical children just after the end of the war;
their father returns home from being a prisoner of war. Reviewed here.
|
MABEL
BARNES-GRUNDY, Paying Pests (1941) WARTIME
MABEL BARNES-GRUNDY, The Two Miss Speckles (1946) WARTIME
Wartime novels by humorous novelist. The second deals with two sisters
in Bath who take in lodgers as their war work.
|
ANNE
BARRETT, The Journey of Johnny Rew
(1954) POSTWAR
Set
in Dorset, children's tale of a boy
orphaned in the Blitz searching for his parents' origins.
|
NINA
BAWDEN, Carrie's War (1973) RETROSPECTIVE
Acclaimed children’s book about the evacuation of a young girl and her
brother to a Welsh village during World War II and the effect their stay has
on her later life.
|
BARBARA BEAUCHAMP, Wine of Honour (1946) POSTWAR
Set immediately after the end of the war, details both men and women
returning from service and adjusting to postwar life. Reviewed here,
and reprinted as a Furrowed Middlebrow book from Dean Street Press.
|
HELEN
BEAUCLERK, So Frail a Thing (1940) WARTIME
HELEN BEAUCLERK, Shadows on the Wall (1941) WARTIME
HELEN BEAUCLERK, Where the Treasure Is (1944) WARTIME
According to Contemporary
Authors, these novels "depict the lives of men and women as they
intertwine during World War II."
|
JOSEPHINE
BELL, Martin Croft (1941) WARTIME
About
a man wounded in World War I for whom Dunkirk is a healing experience.
|
JOSEPHINE
BELL, Trouble at Wrekin Farm (1942) WARTIME
Mystery novel rife with Home Guard concerns, fifth columnists, and
other wartime atmosphere.
|
JOSEPHINE
BELL, Death at the Medical Board (1944) WARTIME
Mystery about the sudden death of a young woman as she's about to sign
up for the women's services.
|
JOSEPHINE BELL, Total War at Haverington (1947) WARTIME
An English town adjusting to wartime conditions.
|
MARY
HAYLEY BELL, Men in Shadow (1942) WARTIME
Hit play focused on the French Resistance.
|
KATHLEEN
S. BELLAMY, The Cage (1942) WARTIME
Troubled marriage of a young poet and an R.A.F. pilot.
|
MARGOT BENARY-ISBERT, The Ark (1953) POSTWAR
MARGOT BENARY-ISBERT, Rowan Farm
(1954) POSTWAR
Children's titles set in Germany immediately after the end of WWII—by
a German-American author, but of interest for this list.
|
ELIZABETH
BERRIDGE, Tell It to a Stranger
(1947, aka Selected Stories) WARTIME
Powerful collection of stories, including several set during the Blitz.
|
EMERY BONETT, High Pavement (1944) WARTIME
Mystery novel with a touch of romance, set in an English village in
wartime. Published in the U.S. as Old
Mrs Camelot.
|
EVA BONNER, Wife for the Duration (1942) WARTIME
Possibly
German author, presumably focused on wartime's strange bedfellows.
|
MARY
BORDEN, Passport for a Girl (1939) APPROACH
Described as "a perceptive
account of English attitudes to the rise of Nazism."
|
ANNE BOSTON, Wave Me Goodbye: Stories of the Second
World War (1988) WARTIME
Anthology of wartime stories by women.
|
PHYLLIS
BOTTOME, The Mortal Storm (1937) APPROACH
Novel warning about the rise of
the Nazis; made into a Hollywood propaganda piece in 1940.
|
PHYLLIS
BOTTOME, London Pride (1941) WARTIME
A poor family, their young son, and a neighbor girl dodging bombs and
wrestling with issues of poverty, evacuation, and looting.
|
PHYLLIS
BOTTOME, Within the Cup (1943, aka Survival) WARTIME
Also focused on the Blitz, and on an Austrian refugee psychiatrist.
|
PHYLLIS
BOTTOME, The Life-Line (1946) APPROACH
Set in Austria in 1938.
|
ELIZABETH
BOWEN, The Heat of the Day (1948) WARTIME
Considered a classic of "Blitz lit," one critic called it a
Graham Greene thriller filtered through the sensibility of Virginia Woolf.
|
ELIZABETH
BOWEN, Collected Stories (1980) WARTIME
Includes all of Bowen's wartime stories, including several of her most
famous.
|
DOROTHY BOWERS, Shadows Before
(1939) APPROACH
Mystery novel set as war is looming.
|
DOROTHY BOWERS, Deed Without a Name (1940) WARTIME
Mystery novel set in the midst of the Phony War.
|
DOROTHY
BOWERS, Fear and Miss Betony (1941) WARTIME
Beautifully-written, melancholy mystery set in a
girls' boarding school evacuated to Dorset.
|
CHRISTIANNA
BRAND, Heads You Lose
(1942) WARTIME
Mystery set in a snowed-in country house during the war,
but apparently making relatively little use of its wartime setting.
|
CHRISTIANNA
BRAND, Green for Danger (1942) WARTIME
Brand's most famous mystery, set in a hospital during
World War II and thick with the atmosphere of bombings and blackout.
|
CHRISTIANNA
BRAND, Suddenly at His Residence (1946, aka The Crooked Wreath) WARTIME
Though published after the war, this mystery makes
effective use of bombs and late war years fatigue.
|
CHRISTIANNA BRAND (as Mary
Roland), The Single Pilgrim (1946) WARTIME
Suggested to Brand by the Ministry of Health, a
novel about a woman who gets syphilis as a result of an affair with a pilot.
|
CHRISTIANNA
BRAND, Death of Jezebel
(1948) POSTWAR
Mystery novel which evokes the postwar feel of London
just after the war.
|
ANGELA
BRAZIL, The Mystery of the Moated
Grange (1942) WARTIME
ANGELA BRAZIL, The Secret of the Border Castle (1943) WARTIME
Late Brazil tales, both set in evacuated schools.
|
ELINOR
M. BRENT-DYER, The Chalet School in
Exile (1940) WARTIME
Deals with the
Chalet girls' encounters with Nazis and the school's escape from Austria to
Guernsey. A fan favorite in the Chalet School series.
|
ELINOR
M. BRENT-DYER, The Chalet School Goes
to It (1941) WARTIME
The Chalet
girls must again escape, this time to Wales, as the Nazis sieze control of
Guernsey.
|
ELINOR
M. BRENT-DYER, The Highland Twins at
the Chalet School (1942)
WARTIME
ELINOR M.
BRENT-DYER, Lavender Laughs in the
Chalet School (1943) WARTIME
ELINOR M.
BRENT-DYER, Gay From China at the
Chalet School (1944) WARTIME
ELINOR M.
BRENT-DYER, Jo to the Rescue (1945) WARTIME
Additional wartime entries in the Chalet School
series, all with a backdrop of war.
|
ANN
BRIDGE, A Place to Stand (1953) RETROSPECTIVE
ANN BRIDGE, The Tightening String (1962) RETROSPECTIVE
Popular novelist’s tales of Hungary in wartime.
|
VERA
BRITTAIN, Account Rendered (1945) WARTIME
Pacifist novel dealing with a shell-shocked doctor
on trial for murder.
|
CAROL BROOKE, Light and Shade (1947) WARTIME
Romantic novel set during the war.
|
DORITA
FAIRLIE BRUCE, Dimsie Carries On
(1941) WARTIME
DORITA FAIRLIE
BRUCE, Toby at Tibbs Cross (1943) WARTIME
DORITA FAIRLIE
BRUCE, Nancy Calls the Tune (1944) WARTIME
Wartime entries for each of Bruce's three popular girls'
series characters.
|
KATE MARY BRUCE, Figures in Black-Out (1941) WARTIME
Novel set partly during World War II.
|
BRYHER,
Beowulf (1956) RETROSPECTIVE
Powerful “blitz lit” novel detailing the experiences
of two women running a tea shop under harsh wartime constraints.
|
MARGARET
BULLARD, A Perch in Paradise (1952) RETROSPECTIVE
Set in Cambridge before, during, and after WWII. According to
Marghanita Laski, it "varies from the exceptionally witty to the vulgar."
|
KATHARINE
BURDEKIN, Swastika Night (1937) APPROACH
Dystopian novel set after centuries of Nazi and Japanese rule of the
world.
|
HESTER
BURTON, In Spite of All Terror
(1968) RETROSPECTIVE
Children’s novel set during wartime and featuring
scenes of evacuation, bombings, and the Dunkirk evacuation.
|
MARGARET BUTCHER, Vacant Possession (1940) WARTIME
Novel about the effects of the beginning of the war on a neighborhood
near the Fulham road.
|
DIANA BUTTENSHAW, Journey to Venice (1949) POSTWAR
Young Englishwoman, having made a disastrous marriage to an Italian
prisoner of war and then leaving him, explores the beauty and the scars of
war as she travels across Italy.
|
ALICE CAMPBELL, Ringed with Fire (1943) WARTIME
Murder mystery set during the Blitz.
|
SARAH CAMPION, Thirty
Million Gas Masks (1937) APPROACH
Described as
"a Near Future tale predictive of the coming catastrophe."
|
JOANNA CANNAN, Death
at the Dog (1939) WARTIME
Mystery set in the earliest days of the war. Reviewed here.
|
ELIZABETH
CARFRAE, The Lonely Road (1942) WARTIME
Elizabeth
Maslen: "the debate between pacifism and commitment to war are at the
core of the romance."
|
ELIZABETH
CARFRAE, Penny Wise (1945) WARTIME
Wartime romance from popular author.
|
ELIZABETH CARFRAE, Good Morning, Miss Morrison (1948) WARTIME
Romantic novel about a teacher in a girls' school
and her choice between "a steady-Eddie type and a glamorous fighter
pilot during wartime."
|
VIOLA CASTANG, Mrs Clements (1947) POSTWAR
Novelist just out of the ATS relocates to an English
village.
|
ROMILLY CAVAN, Beneath
the Visiting Moon (1940)
APPROACH
Delightful comedy of family and village life and of approaching war
getting in the way of romance. Reviewed here. Available as a Furrowed
Middlebrow reprint.
|
HESTER
W. CHAPMAN, Long Division (1943) WARTIME
About an unhappily-married woman who starts a prep
school during the war years.
|
BRIDGET
CHETWYND, Hay, Then (1943) WARTIME
Humorous novel
set in a wartime village. Publisher's blurb compares it to Evelyn Waugh.
|
BRIDGET
CHETWYND, Sleeping and Waking
(1944) WARTIME
Odd novel in
which chapters alternate between adults' sophisticated chatter and a child's
vivid dreams.
|
BRIDGET
CHETWYND, Death Has Ten Thousand Doors
(1951) POSTWAR
BRIDGET
CHETWYND, Rubies, Emeralds and Diamonds
(1952) POSTWAR
Two mystery
novels featuring Petunia Best, an ex-WAAF who teams up with a former intelligence
officer to form a detective agency.
|
AGATHA
CHRISTIE, N or M (1941) WARTIME
Christie's one wartime mystery actually set during
the war—Tommy and Tuppence track an undercover German agent.
|
AGATHA
CHRISTIE, Absent in the Spring
(1944) WARTIME
One of Christie's Mary Westmacott novels, set in the
Middle East as a woman reflects on her life while waiting for a train. The
war remains firmly in the background.
|
AGATHA
CHRISTIE, Taken at the Flood (1948) POSTWAR
The one Poirot novel to (briefly) feature the war;
in the opening, we see Poirot, in flashback, experiencing an air raid while
at his club.
|
EILEEN
HELEN CLEMENTS, Cherry Harvest
(1943) WARTIME
Mystery novel set on a crumbling country estate to
which a girls' school has been evacuated. Reviewed here.
|
EILEEN
HELEN CLEMENTS, Berry Green (1945) WARTIME
A thriller set in an English village, in which a
visiting actor might be a German spy.
|
EILEEN
HELEN CLEMENTS, Weathercock (1949) POSTWAR
Clements' series detective and his wife return to the home they had
lent to refugees during the war, to find a "library book with
interesting sketches inside."
|
MARJORIE
CLEVES, A School Goes to Scotland
(1944) WARTIME
Presumably this girls' school story deals with a
school evacuated to Scotland?
|
DOROTHY
CLEWES, The Blossom on the Bough
(1944) WARTIME
Though the bulk of the story is told in flashback,
the present day portion takes place late in the war, when a middle-aged woman
considers buying back her family home, triggering memories of her earlier
life.
|
JOAN COCKIN, Curiosity
Killed the Cat (1947) POSTWAR
Mystery set in
a Cotswold village just after World War II, having to do with the Ministry of
Scientific Research, which was set up there in wartime but has lingered into
peacetime.
|
JOAN COGGIN, The
Mystery at Orchard House (1946) APPROACH
Humorous Lady
Lupin mystery set at a country hotel in Kent on the cusp of the war.
|
JOAN COGGIN, Penelope
Passes, or Why Did She Die? (1946) POSTWAR
Coggin went
directly from pre-war, in The Mystery
at Orchard House, to the immediate postwar in this Lady Lupin mystery.
|
JOAN COGGIN, Dancing
With Death (1947) POSTWAR
Final Lady
Lupin mystery, set in the years of postwar austerity.
|
MARGARET COLE (w. G. D. H. Cole), Murder at the Munition Works (1940)
Mystery presumably set in
the early days of the war.
|
MARGARET
COLE (w. G. D. H. Cole), Toper's End
(1942) WARTIME
Far-fetched (and reportedly anti-Semitic) thriller
about murder among a team of scientists.
|
BARBARA COMYNS, Mr. Fox (1987) RETROSPECTIVE
Set during the war and based on Comyns' own life
after the breakup of her first marriage.
|
MABEL
CONSTANDUROS, So They Were Married
(1942) WARTIME
Wartime family drama from
a prominent actress and playwright.
|
LETTICE
COOPER, Black Bethlehem (1947) WARTIME
Three novellas, two about the war—one featuring an injured war hero
adapting to home life, the other about a woman who takes in a shady refugee.
|
LETTICE
COOPER, Fenny (1953) RETROSPECTIVE
Set before and after the war in Florence, which follows a young girl
from her arrival in Italy as a governess through turbulent events both
personal and political.
|
SUSAN COOPER, Dawn
of Fear (1970) RETROSPECTIVE
Tale of three boys' adventures living just outside of London during the
Blitz.
|
MARCH
COST (as Margaret Morrison) & PAMELA TULK-HART, Paid to Be Safe (1942) WARTIME
Focused on women in the Air Transport Auxiliary,
whose "lives turn out
to be an odd blend of strenuous activity, flying jargon, bridge hands and
romance."
|
GWENDOLINE
COURTNEY, The Denehurst Secret Service
(1940) WARTIME
GWENDOLINE COURTNEY, Well Done Denehurst (1941) WARTIME
Popular girls' author's
adventure tales involving German spies.
|
GWENDOLINE COURTNEY, Sally's Family (1946) POSTWAR
Charming novel about a young girl trying to make a home for her five
orphaned siblings, who have been evacuated to different families during the
war and have developed very different personalities. Reviewed here.
|
FRANCES CRANE,
The Yellow Violet (1942)
WARTIME
Humorous American mystery set in San Francisco in the early days of
World War II.
|
FANNY
CRADOCK, Castle Rising series (1975-1985) RETROSPECTIVE
Eccentric chef and novelist’s popular series tracing
a family’s fortunes, including the war years.
|
RICHMAL
CROMPTON, Mrs. Frensham Describes a
Circle (1942) WARTIME
Entertaining tale of a woman who, having lost her
husband, re-engages with life by involving herself in the affairs of others.
Reviewed here.
|
RICHMAL
CROMPTON, William at War WARTIME
Compilation of several of William's wartime
misadventures.
|
HONOR
CROOME, You’ve Gone Astray (1945) APPROACH
About two friends from the 1930s up to the beginning of the war. Set in
Canada?
|
HONOR
CROOME, The Faithless Mirror (1946) WARTIME
Set in wartime Ottawa and focused on the difficulties between a brother
and sister.
|
PRIMROSE
CUMMING, Silver Eagle Carries On
(1940) WARTIME
A family-run riding school struggles with wartime limitations.
|
PRIMROSE
CUMMING, Owls Castle Farm (1942) WARTIME
Based on Cumming's own experiences as a Land Girl.
|
CELIA
DALE, The Least of These (1943) WARTIME
Per Neglected Books here, "follows
one lower middle class London family, the Sharps, through their experience of
the Blitz."
|
MORAY DALTON, The Art School Murders (1943) WARTIME
MORAY DALTON, Death
at the Villa (1946) WARTIME
Mystery novels set in wartime.
|
CLEMENCE
DANE, The Arrogant History of White Ben
(1939) APPROACH
Allegorical
novel about the rise of Hitler and the Nazis.
|
SHIRLEY DARBYSHIRE, Distant Music (1942) WARTIME
Novel of family life in wartime.
|
SHIRLEY DARBYSHIRE, City Without Sentinel (1944) WARTIME
Tale of a young woman adapting to life outside of
London and to the guests the war brings to her door.
|
THERESA DE KERPELY (writing
as Teresa Kay), A Crown of Ashes
(1952) RETROSPECTIVE
Novel based on her wartime experiences living in
Budapest, published pseudonymously to protect family members still living in
Hungary.
|
ELISABETH DE WAAL, The Exiles Return (2013) POSTWAR
Written much earlier but only published by Persephone in 2013. Set in
1954, tells of three Austrians returning home after years away.
|
E.
M. DELAFIELD, The Provincial Lady in
Wartime (1940) WARTIME
Follows
Delafield's beloved title character into the early days of the war.
|
E.
M. DELAFIELD, No One Now Will Know
(1941) APPROACH
Begins on the
cusp of the war but then flashes back to the 1870s.
|
E.
M. DELAFIELD, Late and Soon (1943) WARTIME
Deals with a
widow taking in evacuees.
|
JOYCE
DENNYS, Henrietta’s War (1985) WARTIME
JOYCE DENNYS, Henrietta Sees It Through (1986) WARTIME
Hilarious
fictionalized letters about home front life, first published in Sketch magazine during World War II.
|
ALEXANDRA
DICK, How Can We Sing? (1942) WARTIME
Tale set among
refugee Poles in Sweden.
|
MONICA
DICKENS, Mariana (1940) WARTIME
Heroine recalls her early life as she waits to hear
of her husband's fate after his ship has been sunk.
|
MONICA
DICKENS, The Fancy (1943) WARTIME
Makes use of Dickens' experiences working in a wartime factory.
|
MONICA
DICKENS, The Happy Prisoner (1946) POSTWAR
Deals with a wounded soldier trying to adapt to life after war.
|
OLIVE DOUGAN, The
Schoolgirl Refugee (1940)
WARTIME
OLIVE DOUGAN, Schoolgirls in
Peril (1944) WARTIME
Wartime school stories
|
ANNE DUFFIELD, A
Bevy of Maids (1941, aka Volunteer
Nurse) WARTIME
Novel focused on a women's ambulance unit in the African Desert.
|
MARY
DUNSTAN, Banners in Bavaria (1939) APPROACH
Dealing with a
"typical" German family on the brink of the war; praised for its
"extraordinarily impressive picture of Munich on the night of the
Anschluss celebrations."
|
MARY DUNSTAN, What
Comes After (1950) POSTWAR
Unmarried woman back in Scotland after the ATS and estranged from her
family adjusts to postwar life.
|
JOSEPHINE
ELDER, Strangers at the Farm School
(1940) WARTIME
The last of Elder's Farm School trilogy; the
strangers of the title are Jewish refugees escaping from Hitler. Reviewed here.
|
JOSEPHINE
ELDER, The Encircled Heart (1951) APPROACH, WARTIME
A woman doctor's challenges and triumphs in the
1930s and 1940s, including World War II, written from the author's personal
knowledge.
|
JOSEPHINE
ELDER, Doctor's Children (1954) POSTWAR
Focuses on an abandoned wife and mother who revives
her career as a doctor in the years just after the war, when the National
Health Service is just beginning. Reviewed here.
|
JANICE ELLIOTT, A State of Peace (1971) RETROSPECTIVE
Set just after WWII. Young woman adjusts to the
anticlimax of postwar life.
|
JANICE ELLIOTT, Secret Places (1981) RETROSPECTIVE
Set in WWII girls' school, about a girl's friendship
with a war refugee.
|
SUSAN
ERTZ, Anger in the Sky (1943) WARTIME
Blitz novel critiqued by Saturday Review as "a little unduly hopeful
about the good effects which will result from the war."
|
CONSTANCE M. EVANS, Enter—A Land Girl (1944) WARTIME
CONSTANCE M. EVANS (as MAIRI O'NAIR), Judy Ashbane, Police Decoy (1944) WARTIME
CONSTANCE M. EVANS (as MAIRI O'NAIR), Storm Over Sandham Park (1944) WARTIME
CONSTANCE M. EVANS (as MAIRI O'NAIR), Four Steps Upwards (1945) WARTIME
Popular romance author's wartime tales, some
including mystery/thriller elements.
|
KATHLEEN EYLES (as CATHERINE
TENNANT), Major Road Ahead (1942) WARTIME
"The story of an up-to-date girl and her men friends
before and during the war."
|
GWENDOLEN
FEATHERSTONHAUGH, Caroline's First Term
(1947) WARTIME
Girls' school
story making fun use of wartime cliches, including a science mistress who may
be a Nazi spy.
|
MONICA
FELTON, To All the Living (1945) WARTIME
Novel dealing
with wartime factory life in England.
|
RACHEL
FERGUSON, A Footman for the Peacock
(1940) WARTIME
Vivid, hilarious, and distinctly unusual portrait of
a terrible family determined not to face wartime hardships. Reviewed here. Available as a
Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
RACHEL
FERGUSON, The Late Widow Twankey
(1943) WARTIME
Even odder than
Ferguson's norm; set during wartime in an English village apparently
possessed by the characters of pantomime. Reviewed here.
|
RACHEL FERGUSON, Sea Front (1954) RETROSPECTIVE
Traces, in Ferguson's eccentric fashion, life in a
seaside resort town before, during, and after WWII.
|
RUBY
FERGUSON, The Moment of Truth
(1944) WARTIME
About a young
girl before and during WWII.
|
RUBY FERGUSON, Our Dreaming Done (1946) POSTWAR
Romantic
melodrama about a war widow feeling smothered by life with her upper-crust
in-laws.
|
RUBY FERGUSON, The Wakeful Guest (1962) RETROSPECTIVE
Rather uninspired mystery/melodrama focused on a
superficial young woman’s encounters with refugees of war.
|
ELIZABETH
FERRARS, I, Said the Fly (1945) WARTIME
Mystery set in London just before and at the very end of
World War II.
|
ELIZABETH
FERRARS, Murder Among Friends
(1946, aka Cheat the Hangman) WARTIME
Mystery set during the war.
|
KATHERINE FIELD, Disappearance of a Niece (1941) WARTIME
KATHERINE FIELD, The
Two-Five to Mardon (1942) WARTIME
Wartime mystery novels featuring some overlap of
characters.
|
KATHERINE FIELD, Murder to Follow (1944) WARTIME
Mystery novel set in 1939, beginning with the
disappearance of a baby during the chaos of early evacuations.
|
ANN FIELDING, The Mayfair Squatters (1945) WARTIME
Empty house in wartime London is occupied by a
disparate group of squatters.
|
PENELOPE FITZGERALD, Human Voices (1980) RETROSPECTIVE
Set at Broadcasting House in London during WWII.
|
HELEN FOLEY, A Handful of Time (1961) RETROSPECTIVE
A Book Society Choice that deals with two women, one
British and one Austrian, from immediately before WWII until "its
confused aftermath," set mostly at or in Cambridge, with occasional scenes
in Austria.
|
CAROL
FORREST, The House of Simon (1942) WARTIME
A wartime tale of abandoned children making their own home.
|
HELEN FORRESTER, Three Women of Liverpool (1984) RETROSPECTIVE
Set in Liverpool in 1941, based on Forrester's own youth
during the war.
|
PAMELA
FRANKAU, Shaken in the Wind (1948) POSTWAR
Traces an ATS
officer's experiences of demobilisation and her relationship with an American
officer.
|
PAMELA
FRANKAU, The Willow Cabin (1949) APPROACH, WARTIME, POSTWAR
With sections set before, during, and after the war,
Frankau's lovely novely set in and around the theatre qualifies for three categories
of this list.
|
PAMELA
FRANKAU, Over the Mountains (1967) RETROSPECTIVE
Final volume of
Clothes of a King's Son trilogy,
set in 1940. (Thank you to Tracy Rosenberg for pointing this one out to me.)
|
ELIZABETH FRAYNE, Life Goes On (1941) WARTIME
Follows the four young Brooke sisters into wartime
adventures.
|
SARAH GAINHAM, Night Falls on the City (1967) RETROSPECTIVE
SARAH GAINHAM, A
Place in the Country (1968) RETROSPECTIVE
SARAH GAINHAM, Private
Worlds (1971) RETROSPECTIVE
A trilogy. Night
Falls was a bestseller and BOMC selection, set in Vienna during the war.
The less acclaimed sequels are set, respectively, soon after the war has
ended and in the early 1950s.
|
DIANA
GARDNER, A Woman Novelist and Other
Stories (2006) WARTIME
Story
collection including "The Land Girl," about a girl from the Women's
Land Army who breaks up her hosts' marriage. Published by Persephone.
|
CATHERINE
GAVIN, Traitors' Gate (1976) RETROSPECTIVE
CATHERINE
GAVIN, None Dare Call It Treason
(1978) RETROSPECTIVE
CATHERINE
GAVIN, How Sleep the Brave (1980) RETROSPECTIVE
Historical novelist’s popular trilogy set in wartime
Britain.
|
STELLA
GIBBONS, The Rich House (1941) WARTIME
Follows several young, mismatched couples and an anonymous
letter-writer just on the cusp of the war.
|
STELLA
GIBBONS, The Bachelor (1944) WARTIME
One of Gibbons' darker novels, featuring an
unpalatable refugee girl disrupting a family's comfortable home life.
|
STELLA
GIBBONS, Westwood (1946) WARTIME
My favorite Gibbons, making beautiful use of its setting in London
circa 1943-1944. Bombed out buildings and an air of fatigue powerfully evoke
the late years of the war.
|
STELLA
GIBBONS, The Matchmaker (1949) POSTWAR
Set immediately after the war, the heroine is still
living with her children in the house to which they were evacuated, and
waiting for her husband to return from Germany.
|
CONSTANCE
GODDARD, Come Wind, Come Weather
(1945) WARTIME
About farm life
in wartime.
|
CONSTANCE
GODDARD, Three at Cherry-Go-Gay
(1949) WARTIME
Another wartime
story, this one about evacuees in Devonshire.
|
RUMER
GODDEN, An Episode of Sparrows
(1955) POSTWAR
Powerful tale of children in the postwar, making powerful
use of the bombed-out buildings of London.
|
ELIZABETH
GOUDGE, The Castle on the Hill
(1942) WARTIME
Goudge's surprisingly complex exploration of good
and evil in a wartime setting.
|
ELIZABETH
GOUDGE, Pilgrims' Inn (1948,
aka The Herb of Grace) POSTWAR
Second volume of the Eliots trilogy, set immediately after the end of the war.
|
FRANCES GRAY, B.U.N.C.
(1938) APPROACH
Satire of industrial war profiteering, with an eye on the coming war.
|
FRANCES GRAY, Period
Piece (1942) WARTIME
Gray's second and final novel, a satire of immoral upper crust
"parasites", presumably (but not certainly) set in the early days
of the war.
|
MARGARET W. GRIFFITHS, Hazel in Uniform (1945) WARTIME
Children's title about young girl determined to contribute to the war
effort, who encounters wartime mysteries. (Thank you to Geraldine Bell for
alerting me to this one and recommending it.)
|
ELIZABETH
M. HARLAND, Farmer's Girl (1942) WARTIME
ELIZABETH M.
HARLAND, Two Ears of Corn (1943) WARTIME
ELIZABETH M.
HARLAND, Well Fare the Plough
(1946) WARTIME
ELIZABETH M. HARLAND, A Path Is There (1948) POSTWAR
Novels about farm life during and immediately after
the war, apparently based on Harland's own experiences.
|
FRANCES HARRIS, June to September (1941) APPROACH
Set in rural France among Brits and French locals as war approaches.
|
MARY K. HARRIS, Gretel at St. Bride's (1941) WARTIME
Girls' school story featuring a student who is a refugee from the
Nazis.
|
MARGARET HASSETT, Beezer's End (1949) WARTIME
Sequel to Hassett's prewar novel Educating Elizabeth, set in a girls'
boarding school during the war.
|
CAROLYN HAYWOOD, Primrose Day (1942)
WARTIME
From the American author of the Betsy series, the adventures of an
English girl evacuated to the U.S.
|
IRENE HEATH, Good Luck and Goodbye (1945) WARTIME
An English mother and her two children make their
way back to England from their evacuation in the tropics on a merchant
steamer.
|
ANNE HEPPLE, The
North Wind Blows (1941)
WARTIME
Young woman with wrong identity papers hides out as a Land Girl.
|
MARJORIE HESSELL TILTMAN, Mrs Morel (1942) POSTWAR
Village life before and during the war.
|
MARJORIE HESSELL TILTMAN, Born a Woman (1951) POSTWAR
Traces the stories of several women in Japan in the
aftermath of World War II.
|
HILDA HEWETT, Kaleidoscope (1947) WARTIME
Tale of a young schoolteacher, taken in by a mother
and her three daughters, who escape flying bombs to an idyllic village in
Worcestershire.
|
KATHLEEN
HEWITT, Lady Gone Astray (1941) WARTIME
Thriller about
a young heiress who develops amnesia after being attacked in the blackout,
and copes with shady refugees.
|
KATHLEEN
HEWITT, The Mice Are Not Amused
(1942) WARTIME
Energetic tale
of a legal secretary who takes a job as head porter at an apartment building
infested with fifth columnists.
|
KATHLEEN
HEWITT, Plenty Under the Counter
(1943) WARTIME
Novel about the
wartime black market.
|
DIANA
MURRAY HILL, Ladies May Now Leave Their
Machines (1944) WARTIME
Novel about
women factory workers in World War II.
|
LORNA
HILL, Northern Lights (1999) WARTIME
One of Hill's Marjorie stories; when she published
them after the war, this one was refused because of it's wartime themes, and
was only finally published in recent years.
|
INEZ
HOLDEN, Night Shift (1941) WARTIME
A powerful episodic portrayal of life in a wartime aircraft factory.
|
INEZ
HOLDEN, There's No Story There
(1944) WARTIME
Rather bleak but interesting tale set in a vast ordnance factory, where
a snowstorm strands workers for a night.
|
INEZ
HOLDEN, To the Boating (1945) WARTIME
Story
collection featuring several tales of wartime life.
|
NORAH
HOULT, Scene for Death (1943) WARTIME
A sort of
experimental reinvention of the murder mystery, set in an English village
during the thick of the war.
|
NORAH
HOULT, There Were No Windows (1944) WARTIME
Brilliant novel
of an elderly woman battling dementia during the Blitz.
|
NORAH
HOULT, House Under Mars (1946) WARTIME
Dark but
powerful portrait of boarding-house life in the late years of the war.
|
ELIZABETH
JANE HOWARD, The Light Years (1990) RETROSPECTIVE
ELIZABETH JANE
HOWARD, Marking Time (1991) RETROSPECTIVE
ELIZABETH JANE
HOWARD, Confusion (1993) RETROSPECTIVE
ELIZABETH JANE
HOWARD, Casting Off (1995) RETROSPECTIVE
ELIZABETH JANE
HOWARD, All Change (2013) RETROSPECTIVE
Howard’s Cazalet Chronicles, her best known and most popular works, which detail a family's experiences
in wartime England.
|
MARJORIE
HUXTABLE, Cherry Tree (1940) WARTIME
Romantic tale
of an unhappily married woman widowed soon after the beginning of World War
II, who goes on to find new romance.
|
MARGARET
ILES, Nobody's Darlings (1942) WARTIME
The effects of
war and the arrival of evacuated children on a slightly rowdy country
village.
|
NORAH C. JAMES, The Gentlewoman (1940) WARTIME
Family drama set in London just before and after war begins.
|
NORAH
C. JAMES, The Hunted Heart (1942) WARTIME
Drama about the
head of a department store and his wife, who enters into an affair with a
young soldier.
|
NORAH
C. JAMES, Enduring Adventure (1944) WARTIME
Recommended by
Grant Hurlock as an entertaining example of "blitz lit."
|
STORM
JAMESON, In the Second Year (1936) APPROACH
Dystopian novel about a Fascist takeover of England.
|
STORM
JAMESON, Cousin Honoré (1940) APPROACH
Novel which attempts to examine the
causes of the war via the microcosm of a village in Alsace.
|
STORM
JAMESON, Europe to Let: The Memoirs of
an Obscure Man (1940) APPROACH
A collection of novellas about the rise of Fascism.
|
STORM
JAMESON, The Fort (1941) WARTIME
Uses the form of a Greek drama in a tale of French and English soldiers
trapped in a cellar as the Nazis approach.
|
STORM
JAMESON, Then We Shall Hear Singing: A
Fantasy in C Major (1942)
WARTIME
Described by
Elizabeth Maslen as "a poignant fable addressing the Czech
tragedy."
|
STORM
JAMESON, Cloudless May (1943) WARTIME
Novel dealing
with the capitulation of France.
|
STORM
JAMESON, The Journal of Mary Hervey
Russell (1945) WARTIME
Somewhat autobiographical fictionalized diary, often considered among
Jameson's best work.
|
STORM
JAMESON, The Green Man (1952) RETROSPECTIVE
An epic war novel and bestseller, tracing nearly two decades of the
leadup to the war and the war itself.
|
PAMELA
HANSFORD JOHNSON, Winter Quarters
(1943) WARTIME
Focuses on an
army battery stationed in a small English village.
|
PAMELA
HANSFORD JOHNSON, An Avenue of Stone
(1947) WARTIME
Set in the late
war period of flying bombs and in the immediate aftermath of the war.
|
PAMELA
HANSFORD JOHNSON, The Survival of the
Fittest (1968) RETROSPECTIVE
Novel tracing a group of friends through the war
years.
|
MARJORIE SCOTT JOHNSTON, The Ghost in Galoshes (1941) WARTIME
In the early days of the war, a young woman works her way through work
in journalism, publishing, and the BBC.
|
JOSEPHINE KAMM, Nettles to My Head (1939) APPROACH
Follows a young Jewish woman from boarding school into adulthood as war
looms in the immediate future. Reviewed here.
|
JOSEPHINE KAMM, Peace, Perfect Peace (1947) POSTWAR
Wonderfully detailed novel of postwar life, focused
particularly on women coping with the transition to peactime. Reviewed here, and available
as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
BARBARA
KAYE, Home Fires Burning (1943) WARTIME
Details are
lacking, but presumably a wartime tale.
|
BARBARA KAYE, Black Market Green (1950) POSTWAR
Details lacking here too, but I'm guessing from the
title that it belongs on this list.
|
MARGARET
KENNEDY, The Feast (1950) POSTWAR
One of Kennedy’s best novels, about a doomed hotel
and its residents, which makes vivid use of postwar conditions. Reviewed here.
|
SUSAN ALICE KERBY, Miss Carter and the Ifrit (1945) WARTIME
A middle-aged
spinster wrestling with the deprivations of the late war years encounters a
genie who helps her rediscover the pleasures of life. Reviewed here. Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
JESSIE KESSON, Another Time, Another Place (1983) RETROSPECTIVE
A group of Italian POWs disrupt life in an isolated
Scottish village.
|
FLORENCE
KILPATRICK, Elizabeth in Wartime
(1942) WARTIME
Wartime entry
in her humorous series of Elizabeth books.
|
ELISABETH
KYLE, The Seven Sapphires (1944) WARTIME
Children's tale
of adventure and family life during wartime.
|
DOROTHY
LAMBERT, Staying Put (1941) WARTIME
DOROTHY
LAMBERT, Birds on the Wing (1943) WARTIME
Interrelated,
humorous tales of home front life in an English village.
|
MARGARET
LANE, Where Helen Lies (1944) WARTIME
Romantic
melodrama set against the backdrop of the home front.
|
JOY
LANGTON, Pro Tem (1945) WARTIME
Ad blurb:
"An engrossing study of several sets of people from widely different
spheres who are thrown together during the London Blitz."
|
DOROTHY M. LARGE, The Quiet Place (1941) WARTIME
Set in an Irish mansion turned boarding-house for those evacuating
themselves from wartime dangers in England.
|
MARGHANITA
LASKI, Love on the Supertax (1944) WARTIME
Enjoyable light tale of class, romance, and the black market.
|
MARGHANITA
LASKI, To Bed with Grand Music
(1946) WARTIME
Originally published
pseudonymously, a darker tale of a young wife whose husband is serving
abroad, whose boredom leads her into a series of affairs.
|
MARGHANITA
LASKI, Tory Heaven (1948, aka Toasted English) POSTWAR
Rollicking satire of the
class system, about a group of castaways rescued after the war, who find the
old class distinctions now codified as law.
|
MARGHANITA
LASKI, Little Boy Lost (1949) POSTWAR
Novel about a father searching for his missing son in France immediately after the
war.
|
MARGHANITA
LASKI, The Village (1952) POSTWAR
Wonderful novel about the aftermath of the war's breakdown of class relations, in the
form of two families reluctantly united by marriage.
|
D. L. LEACH, Cleveland
View (1944) APPROACH
Novel set in Yorkshire in the days before and just after the beginning
of the war.
|
WINIFRED LEAR, The
Causeway (1948) WARTIME
Tragicomic tale of life in and around a rectory from the approach of
war to the early days of the Blitz. Reviewed here.
|
MOLLY
LEFEBURE, Blitz! (1988) RETROSPECTIVE
The one novel by the author of Evidence for the Crown (1954), a memoir of working in the London morgue
during WWII, dramatized a few years ago as Murder on the Home Front.
|
ROSAMOND
LEHMANN, The Gypsy's Baby and Other
Stories (1946) WARTIME
Collection in
which the war figures prominently in several stories.
|
ROSAMOND
LEHMANN, The Echoing Grove (1953) POSTWAR
Elegant novel of the postwar, including flashbacks
to the Blitz and wartime conditions.
|
DORIS
LESLIE, House in the Dust (1942) WARTIME
Novel mostly
told in flashback to earlier years, but the framing sections take place
during the Blitz.
|
LORNA
LEWIS, Tea and Hot Bombs (1943) WARTIME
Brilliantly
detailed tale of a young girl's experiences driving a mobile canteen in
London during the Blitz. Reviewed here.
|
LORNA
LEWIS, Feud in the Factory (1944) WARTIME
Young girl
orphaned by a bomb fights back against Hitler by working in a factory.
|
MARJORIE LIVINGSTONE, Moloch (1942) WARTIME
Observer ad: "A Novel of the
war as seen from both the physical and astral planes…"
|
PHYLLIS LIVINGSTONE, In Our Metropolis (1940) WARTIME
Cheerful novel of a young couple in London during the Phony War.
|
NORA
LLOYD, The Young Liberators (1949) WARTIME
Children's
title about "an Anglo-French family's wartime exploits in the Savoy
Alps.
|
ALICE
LUNT, Tomorrow the Harvest (1955) RETROSPECTIVE
ALICE LUNT, Eileen of Redstone Farm (1964) RETROSPECTIVE
Children’s stories based on Lunt’s own
experiences in the Women's Land Army during World War II.
|
MARY
LUTYENS, Family Colouring (1940) APPROACH
MARY LUTYENS, Together and Alone (1942) WARTIME
MARY LUTYENS, And Now There Is You (1942) POSTWAR
Wartime dramas from a popular romantic novelist.
|
DOROTHY
MACARDLE, The Seed Was Kind (1944) WARTIME
Troubled young
girl working with Czech refugees during the Blitz.
|
ROSE
MACAULAY, "Miss Anstruther's Letters" WARTIME
Story based on Macaulay's own experience of being bombed
out and her loss of a life's collection of letters, books and papers.
|
ROSE
MACAULAY, The World My Wilderness
(1950) POSTWAR
Lovely story of Barbary, a young girl who spent her youth with the
Maquis (French resistance guerillas) in occupied France and must now adapt to
normal life among the ruins of London. Reviewed here.
|
JEAN
MACGIBBON (as Jean Howard), When the
Weather's Changing (1945)
WARTIME
Impressionistic
account of farmer's wife's summer, which John Bayley called "a
pioneering book, which assimilated, with great originality, a number of
fictional genres—memoir, reportage, stream of consciousness."
|
HELEN
MACINNES, Above Suspicion (1941) WARTIME
HELEN MACINNES,
Assignment in Brittany (1942) WARTIME
HELEN MACINNES,
While Still We Live (1944) WARTIME
HELEN MACINNES,
Horizon (1945) WARTIME
Spy novels and
thrillers, all with wartime settings.
|
AVERIL MACKENZIE-GRIEVE, Sacrifice to Mars (1940) WARTIME
Publisher's blurb: "Novel of Nazi Germany from the inside!"
|
AVERIL MACKENZIE-GRIEVE, A Gibbet for Myself (1941) APPROACH
Novel of the rise of fascism in Italy, set just before to rise of
Mussolini.
|
CATHERINE MACDONALD MACLEAN, Seven for Cordelia (1941) WARTIME
CATHERINE MACDONALD MACLEAN, Three
for Cordelia (1943, aka The Tharrus
Three) WARTIME
CATHERINE MACDONALD MACLEAN, Farewell
to Tharrus (1944) WARTIME
Sentimental tales of Glasgow evacuees on a farm in the Highlands.
|
ETHEL
MANNIN, The Dark Forest (1945) WARTIME
Pacifist author's look at "a tragedy born of
fraternisation, one of the most highly charged contemporary issues."
|
ADELAIDE
MANNING (w. Cyril Henry Coles, as Manning Coles), Drink to Yesterday (1940) WARTIME
ADELAIDE
MANNING (w. Cyril Henry Coles, as Manning Coles), Toast to Tomorrow (1940, aka Pray
Silence) WARTIME
ADELAIDE
MANNING (w. Cyril Henry Coles, as Manning Coles), They Tell No Tales (1940) WARTIME
ADELAIDE MANNING (w. Cyril Henry Coles, as Manning Coles), Without Lawful Authority (1943) WARTIME
ADELAIDE
MANNING (w. Cyril Henry Coles, as Manning Coles), Green Hazard (1945)
WARTIME
ADELAIDE
MANNING (w. Cyril Henry Coles, as Manning Coles), The Fifth Man (1946)
WARTIME
ADELAIDE
MANNING (w. Cyril Henry Coles, as Manning Coles), A Brother for Hugh (1947, aka With
Intent to Deceive) POSTWAR
Light-hearted
spy novels making use of wartime and postwar intrigue.
|
OLIVIA
MANNING, Growing Up (1948) WARTIME, POSTWAR
Includes
several stories written during and immediately after the war.
|
OLIVIA
MANNING, Artist Among the Missing
(1949) POSTWAR
Novel about
a painter scarred by his war experiences.
|
OLIVIA
MANNING, School for Love (1951) WARTIME
A young orphan finds love in 1945 Jerusalem.
|
OLIVIA
MANNING, The Balkan Trilogy
(1960-1965) RETROSPECTIVE
OLIVIA MANNING,
The Levant Trilogy (1977-1980) RETROSPECTIVE
Two epic trilogies—dramatized for television as Fortunes of War—tracing a young
married couple’s lives in the Eastern Europe and the Middle East during the
war years.
|
ELISABETH MARGETSON, A Stranger Beckoned (1942) WARTIME
"A modern romance of the R.A.F."
|
ANNE MARRECO (writing as
ALICE ACLAND), A Person of Discretion
(1958) RETROSPECTIVE
About three sisters from Brussels who get mixed up
with the black market and the Resistance movement late in World War II.
|
EILEEN
MARSH, We Lived in London (1942) WARTIME
Enjoyable tale
of a working class family during the Blitz.
|
EILEEN
MARSH, A Walled Garden (1943) WARTIME
Novel about
evacuees in a village in Kent.
|
EILEEN
MARSH, Eight Over Essen (1943) WARTIME
Novel about the
crew of a bomber during a one week leave.
|
EILEEN
MARSH, We Come Home (1948) POSTWAR
Sequel to We Lived in London, set shortly after
the war's end.
|
ANNE
MAYBURY, Arise, Oh Sun (1940) WARTIME
Romance set in the early days of the war.
|
JACOBINE MENZIES-WILSON, September to September (1940) APPROACH
The story of a successful country family, the
Stanyons, in the year between Munich and the beginning of the war.
|
JACOBINE MENZIES-WILSON, The Eye of a Needle (1942) WARTIME
Follows the Stanyon family introduced in September to September from May 1940
to January 1941.
|
JACOBINE MENZIES-WILSON, At First Light (1944) WARTIME
Set in
1942-1943, continues the story of the Stanyons begun in September to September and The
Eye of a Needle.
|
JACOBINE MENZIES-WILSON, August at Acrelands (1946) WARTIME
Final volume in
author's Stanyon family series, taking place in 1945 with peace quickly
approaching.
|
BETTY
MILLER, On the Side of the Angels
(1945) WARTIME
Deals powerfully with gender roles as revealed by wartime
experiences.
|
GLADYS
MITCHELL, Brazen Tongue (1940) WARTIME
Mystery set against a backdrop of air-raid
precautions and blackout in the early days of the war. Briefly reviewed here.
|
GLADYS
MITCHELL, Sunset Over Soho (1943) WARTIME
Mystery with
Dame Beatrice working as a doctor at a shelter for air raid casualties and
bombed-out refugees.
|
NAOMI
MITCHISON, The Blood of the Martyrs
(1939) APPROACH
According to
ODNB, "attempted to draw parallels between Nero's treatment of early
Christians and Hitler's persecution of the Jews."
|
NANCY
MITFORD, Pigeon Pie (1940) WARTIME
A rather zany spy story set in the earliest days of the war.
|
ALICE
MOLONY, Lion's Crouch (1944) WARTIME
Children's
book—"an exciting story about spies in Cornwall."
|
ELINOR
MORDAUNT, Blitz Kids (1941) WARTIME
By turns humorous and poignant tale about children in "The
Cut" in London during the Blitz.
|
JOAN
MORGAN, Ding Dong Dell (1943) WARTIME
Novel focused
on wartime refugees.
|
IRIS
MORLEY, Nothing but Propaganda
(1946) WARTIME
Partly
autobiographical tale of a young wife wrestling with Communist ideals and the
realities of war.
|
IRIS
MORLEY, Not Without Fantasy (1947) WARTIME
Also based on
her real experiences as the wife of a Moscow correspondent, this novel
satirizes the life of a journalist in wartime.
|
NORAH
MYLREA, Spies at Candover (1941) WARTIME
Girls' school
story set in an evacuated school.
|
DAISY
NEUMANN, Now That April's There
(1945) WARTIME
Beginning in
early 1944, the tale of the bumpy readjustments of two children who have just
returned home after spending most of the war in the U.S. Reviewed here.
|
BARBARA
NOBLE, The House Opposite (1943) WARTIME
Novel about an illicit love affair in London during the
Blitz, with extraordinary details of what life was like, by an author who
lived through it. Reviewed here. Available as a Furrowed
Middlebrow reprint.
|
BARBARA
NOBLE, Doreen (1946) WARTIME
Powerful novel (reprinted by Persephone) about a young evacuee in World
War II; makes excellent use of Noble's interest in child psychology.
|
MARY
NORTON, The Magic Bed-Knob (1943) WARTIME
MARY NORTON, Bonfires and Broomsticks (1947) WARTIME
Children's
books about a nanny learning to be a witch; the first at least takes place
during the war and includes a scene in London during the Blitz. The latter
takes place partly in 1666, but also in wartime London.
|
KATE
O'BRIEN, The Last of Summer (1943) APPROACH
Social drama
set during a two week period in late summer of 1939, just as the war is
beginning.
|
JANE
OLIVER, The Hour of the Angel
(1942) WARTIME
Set during the
Blitz, with main character whose husband is in the RAF.
|
JANE
OLIVER, In No Strange Land (1944) WARTIME
Primarily an historical
novel, but it ends during WWII.
|
CAROLA
OMAN, Nothing to Report (1940) WARTIME
Delightful
Provincial Lady-ish diary of a village facing the early days of the war.
Reviewed here. Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
CAROLA
OMAN, Somewhere in England (1943) WARTIME
Sequel to Nothing to Report, showing the village
now in the full swing of war. Reviewed here. Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
URSULA
ORANGE, Tom Tiddler's Ground (1941,
aka Ask Me No Questions) WARTIME
Charming
wartime tale of a young mother evacuated to the countryside who snoops into
village affairs. Reviewed here. Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
URSULA
ORANGE, Have Your Cake (1942) WARTIME
Humorous novel
set during the war.
|
URSULA
ORANGE, Company in the Evening
(1944) WARTIME
Darker tale
about discordant housemates during the late years of the war and a divorced
couple who bond again as a result. Reviewed here. Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
EVE
ORME, There's Something About a Soldier
(1942) WARTIME
Wartime romance
novel.
|
MOLLIE
PANTER-DOWNES, One Fine Day (1947) POSTWAR
Novel that evokes Woolf's Mrs.
Dalloway in lushly detailing a single ordinary day in the life of a woman
immediately after the end of the war.
|
MOLLIE
PANTER-DOWNES, Good Evening, Mrs.
Craven: The Wartime Stories (1999) WARTIME
Short stories
originally published in The New Yorker,
detailing the oddities and humor of wartime situations.
|
MOLLIE
PANTER-DOWNES, Minnie's Room: The
Peacetime Stories (2002)
POSTWAR
Follow-up to Good
Morning, Mrs. Craven, including additional New Yorker stories published after the war.
|
M.
PARDOE, Bunkle Began It (1942) WARTIME
Atmospheric
wartime entry in popular children's adventure series.
|
EDITH
PARGETER, She Goes to War (1942) WARTIME
Diary-novel based on Pargeter's own experiences in the WRNS; paints an
often vivid and detailed picture of the dangers and opportunities of war
work.
|
EDITH
PARGETER, The Lame Crusade (1945) WARTIME
EDITH PARGETER,
Reluctant Odyssey (1946) WARTIME
EDITH PARGETER,
Warfare Accomplished (1947) WARTIME
Trilogy
(cumulatively known as The Eighth
Champion of Christendom) which follows a young man from an English village who experiences warfare and
returns home a changed man.
|
EDITH
PARGETER, Lost Children (1951) POSTWAR
About a young girl from an impoverished aristocratic
family who falls in love with a serviceman stationed nearby.
|
EDITH
PARGETER, Most Loving Mere Folly
(1953) POSTWAR
Set "in a bombed-out London suburb" just
after the war, a tale of a married woman's illicit love affair, threatened by
the sudden death of her husband.
|
EDITH
PARGETER, Means of Grace (1956) POSTWAR
Novel about a young soprano, living in England since
the war, who returns at war's end to her Baltic nation and witnesses turmoil
and the beginnings of the Cold War.
|
EDITH PARGETER (as ELLIS
PETERS), The Horn of Roland (1974) RETROSPECTIVE
Publisher blurb: "Buried secrets from the Nazi
era threaten to destroy an Austrian composer."
|
JILL PATON WALSH, Fireweed (1969) RETROSPECTIVE
Two teenage runaways surviving in wartime London.
|
WINIFRED
PECK, Bewildering Cares: A Week in the
Life of a Clergyman's Wife (1940) WARTIME
Hilarious fictional diary of a rector's wife just as
the anxieties of war are kicking in. Reviewed here. Available as a
Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
WINIFRED
PECK, House-Bound (1942) WARTIME
Charming comedy
about a woman surviving without
servants in wartime Edinburgh.
|
WINIFRED
PECK, There Is a Fortress (1945) WARTIME
Mostly
historical, beginning just after World War I and continuing into World War
II.
|
SHEILA
PIM, Common or Garden Crime (1945) WARTIME
Mystery that vividly portrays wartime life in an Irish
village. Reviewed here.
|
SHEILA PIM, Creeping Venom (1946) POSTWAR
Charming and funny mystery set in an Irish village,
set in the final days of the war and the gradual return of peace. Reviewed here.
|
JOCELYN
PLAYFAIR, A House in the Country
(1944) WARTIME
Set in 1942,
about a woman dealing with boarders and family in the English countryside
while her lover is in a lifeboat after his boat is torpedoed.
|
DORIS
POCOCK, Catriona Carries On (1940) WARTIME
Girls' story set in the early days of the war.
|
DORIS
POCOCK, Lorna on the Land (1946) WARTIME
Wartime
children's book about Land Girls.
|
EVADNE
PRICE, Jane the Patient (1940) WARTIME
EVADNE PRICE, Jane at War (1947) WARTIME
Wartime entries
in popular series.
|
L[ILIAN].
F[AITH]. LOVEDAY PRIOR, The Valley of
Exile (1939) APPROACH
L[ILIAN].
F[AITH]. LOVEDAY PRIOR, These Times of
Travail (1941) APPROACH
Novels dealing with the rise of fascism in the South
Tyrol region of Austria.
|
MARGARET PULSFORD, Hope My Heritage (1945) WARTIME
Tragic novel about the love affair of a young woman
running a shop in wartime.
|
VIRGINIA
PYE, The Prices Return (1946) POSTWAR
Follows the Price family from some of Pye’s earlier
works into the postwar, facing housing dilemmas and other challenges. Briefly
discussed here.
|
BARBARA
PYM, "Home Front Novel" (from Civil
to Strangers) WARTIME
Early short
work set during the war and only published posthumously.
|
BARBARA
PYM, "So Very Secret" (from Civil
to Strangers) WARTIME
Described by
Pym as a "spy story," another early short work.
|
BARBARA
PYM, Excellent Women (1952) POSTWAR
Pym's most famous work, a humorous tale set in and
around a village church in the years immediately after the war.
|
HAZEL
PYNEGAR & NOEL LANGLEY, Somebody's
Rocking My Dreamboat (1949)
WARTIME
Cynical,
adolescent tale set in 1941, about a cargo steamer carrying a loathsome group
of people trying to escape to safer climes. Ugh.
|
DOROTHY
UNA RATCLIFFE, Mrs. Buffey in Wartime
(1942) WARTIME
Fictionalized
memoir about Ratcliffe's wartime experiences.
|
MARY
RENAULT, The Friendly Young Ladies
(1944) WARTIME
Matter-of-fact
portrayal of a lesbian couple living on a houseboat during World War II.
|
MARY
RENAULT, The North Face (1948) POSTWAR
Novel which, according to Jenny Hartley, takes the main
character's predilection for rock-climbing as a symbol for life in the
postwar years.
|
MARY
RENAULT, The Charioteer (1953) RETROSPECTIVE
Early portrayal of gay men, dealing with a wounded soldier's triangular
relationship with a conscientious objector and a naval officer while in a
hospital in the midst of blackout and bombings.
|
MARJORIE
RICHARDS, King's Soldier (1944) WARTIME
Long novel
detailing the life of a military man in various conflicts, ending with the
Battle of Britain.
|
EDITH
CAROLINE RIVETT (aka Carol Carnac, aka E. C. R. Lorac)
Death Came Softly (1943, as E. C.
R. Lorac) WARTIME
Checkmate to Murder (1944, as E. C. R. Lorac) WARTIME
Murder by Matchlight (1945, as E. C. R. Lorac) WARTIME
Fire in the Thatch (1946, as E. C. R. Lorac) WARTIME
Crossed Skis (1951, as Carol Carnac) POSTWAR
Wartime
mysteries from an author recently brought back into print by British Library
Crime Classics.
|
EDITH
CAROLINE RIVETT (as Carol Rivett), Island
Spell (1951) POSTWAR
Children's
title about evacuees returning home.
|
E.
ARNOT ROBERTSON, The Signpost
(1943) WARTIME
Novel about a wounded RAF pilot and his
relationship with a French woman in a remote Irish fishing village.
|
DENISE ROBINS, Winged Love (1941) WARTIME
Romance novelist's wartime entry, the tale of an RAF
officer's escape from France with the French woman he loves.
|
CATHERINE ROSS, Battle Dress (1979) RETROSPECTIVE
Written by a former WAAF, a novel about wartime WAAF
life at an airfield in the Orkneys. Recommended for this list by Avis Judd.
|
JEAN
ROSS, Women in Exile (1942) WARTIME
Largely focused
on women in an English village, including evacuees and those who have lost
their homes to bombs. Reviewed here.
|
JEAN ROSS, Aunt Ailsa (1944) WARTIME
About English
family life, mostly flashbacks to earlier times, but prologue and epilogue
are WWII.
|
BERTA RUCK, Jade Earrings (1941) WARTIME
Cheerful novel about the transformation of a
Bloomsbury singer into a Land Girl in Wales.
|
BERTA RUCK, Fiancées Are Relatives (1941) WARTIME
Romance featuring some of the same characters as
Ruck's WWI novel The Girls at His
Billet (1916).
|
HARRIET RUTLAND, Blue Murder (1942) WARTIME
Murder mystery centered around an eccentric family
and a mystery writer boarding with them. Reprinted by Dean Street Press.
|
VITA
SACKVILLE-WEST, Grand Canyon (1941) WARTIME
Her foray into
sci-fi, imagining the outcome of a
German victory in the war.
|
MAUREEN
SARSFIELD, Green December Fills the
Graveyard (1945) WARTIME
Mystery set in a partially-bombed out manor house
in the late years of the war. Reprinted with the bland title Murder at Shots Hall. Reviewed here.
|
MAUREEN
SARSFIELD, Gloriana (1946) WARTIME
The author's
only non-mystery, about the eccentric residents of a Chelsea boarding house
in 1943.
|
CONSTANCE
SAVERY, Enemy Brothers (1943) WARTIME
About a British airman who believes that a young German prison is
actually his brother, who had been kidnapped many years before.
|
DOROTHY L. SAYERS, "The
Wimsey Papers" (1940) WARTIME
Published in the Spectator
and only recently reprinted, a series of fictional letters between Peter
Wimsey, Harriet Vane, and others of their circle, focused on the early days
of the war.
|
DOROTHY
L. SAYERS, Striding Folly (1971) WARTIME
Collection of
Lord Peter stories, which includes one story written during the war.
|
MARGERIE SCOTT, The Darling Illusion (1955) RETROSPECTIVE
Opening with a murdered actress, whom we then see in
flashback through her life, including in London during the Blitz. Reviewed by
Brian at Dusty Bookcase here.
|
MARGERY
SHARP, Britannia Mews (1946) WARTIME
Novel that
covers a lot of ground in its heroine's life but ends up during World War II.
|
MARGERY SHARP, The Foolish Gentlewoman (1948) POSTWAR
Follows the inhabitants and neighbors of a house on
the outskirts of London just after the end of World War II.
|
JANE
SHAW, House of the Glimmering Light
(1943) WARTIME
Popular girls'
author's wartime spy story.
|
EDITH
SIMON, Biting the Blue Finger
(1942) WARTIME
German-born
author's tale, set from the beginning of the war to the Blitz, of a restless
young woman who leaves home to work on a barge, then at an ARP post.
|
DOROTHY
EVELYN SMITH, He Went for a Walk
(1954) RETROSPECTIVE
Children’s book in which a boy made
homeless by the Blitz finds his way across wartime England.
|
MADGE S. SMITH, Peggy Speeds the Plough (1941) WARTIME
Girls' story about joining the Land Army.
|
STEVIE
SMITH, The Holiday (1949) POSTWAR
Written in the final years of the war, but most wartime references were
removed when it finally appeared. The novel retains a claustrophibic feel
which may be explained if one imagines it taking place late in the war.
|
NANCY
SPAIN, The Kat Strikes (1955) POSTWAR
Energetic, darkly humorous thriller set in postwar
London and making use of its characters’ wartime experiences.
|
MURIEL
SPARK, The Girls of Slender Means
(1963) RETROSPECTIVE
Takes place in a London boarding-house for girls during the final days
of World War II.
|
ANN STAFFORD, Cuckoo Green (1941) WARTIME
Wartime tale of a country village in wartime from
the author of Greyladies' Silver Street.
|
BARBARA
STANTON, Sweetheart of a Million
(1943) WARTIME
Wartime entry
from popular romance novelist.
|
MARGUERITE
STEEN, Shelter (1942) WARTIME
Blitz novel
which makes some use of the experimental techniques of modernism.
|
D.
E. STEVENSON, The English Air
(1940) WARTIME
Set in the last days of peace and first days of war,
involving an English family coping with the approach of war and the son of a
Nazi officer who visits them and has a somewhat different perspective on
events.
|
D.
E. STEVENSON, Mrs. Tim Carries On
(1941) WARTIME
Stevenson takes her loosely autobiographical
alter-ego into the early months of wartime. Available as a Furrowed
Middlebrow reprint.
|
D.
E. STEVENSON, Spring Magic (1941) WARTIME
Young woman
takes her first holiday, to a fishing village in Scotland during the war.
Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
D.
E. STEVENSON, Crooked Adam (1942) WARTIME
Stevenson's
foray into World War II spy novels, set in Scotland.
|
D.
E. STEVENSON, Celia's House (1943) WARTIME
A family story
beginning in 1905 and ending up in 1942. The wartime scenes are short and
only at the very end of the novel.
|
D.
E. STEVENSON, The Two Mrs. Abbotts
(1943) WARTIME
Wartime entry
in Stevenson's Miss Buncle series, featuring brave soldiers, rationing, and a
German parachutist.
|
D.
E. STEVENSON, Listening Valley
(1944) WARTIME
Beginning in
the 1930s and progressing to wartime London and Scotland.
|
D.
E. STEVENSON, The Four Graces
(1946) WARTIME
Loosely
connected to The Two Mrs. Abbotts
and the earlier Miss Buncle books, this entry takes place in the final days
of the war.
|
D. E. STEVENSON, Mrs. Tim Gets a Job (1947) POSTWAR
Postwar entry in Stevenson's popular Mrs. Tim series
(and therefore a sequel of sorts to Mrs.
Tim Carries On). Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
D. E. STEVENSON, Kate Hardy (1947) POSTWAR
Set in the immediate postwar years, about a young
writer in an English village.
|
D. E. STEVENSON, Young Mrs. Savage (1948) POSTWAR
About a young widow with four children, recovering
from the war in a Scottish village.
|
D. E. STEVENSON, Vittoria Cottage (1949) POSTWAR
A novel of family life in an English village in the
years just after the war. Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
D. E. STEVENSON, Amberwell (1955)
RETROSPECTIVE
About a family and their staff in a country house before and during the
war.
|
D. E. STEVENSON, Summerhills (1956) POSTWAR
Sequel to Amberwell, traces
the Ayrton family into the postwar years and includes the setting up of a
boys' school.
|
D. E. STEVENSON, Sarah Morris Remembers (1966) RETROSPECTIVE
Story of a woman looking back over her early life, from her childhood
in a vicarage to the thick of the Blitz in London.
|
MARY STEWART, Madam,
Will You Talk? (1954) POSTWAR
Popular romantic suspense author's debut, in which a young widow on
holiday in Avignon gets mixed up in intrigue, partly concerned with events
occurring during the war.
|
MONICA
STIRLING, Lovers Aren't Company
(1949) WARTIME
Set in the
final days of World War II in Italy, based on Stirling's own experiences as a
war correspondent.
|
MONICA STIRLING, Ladies with a Unicorn (1953) POSTWAR
Glamourous tale of filmmaking in Rome, but featuring several characters
haunted by wartime losses.
|
MONICA STIRLING, The Boy in Blue (1955) POSTWAR
Tale of doomed May-September romance between a wealthy older woman and
a young Frenchman bearing the scars of WWII.
|
GRACE ZARING STONE (as ETHEL
VANCE), Escape (1939) APPROACH
American author's bestselling novel about an actress
who winds up in a German concentration camp. Stone used her pseudonym because
her daughter, author Eleanor Perenyi, was living in occupied Hungary.
|
GRACE ZARING STONE (as ETHEL
VANCE), Reprisal (1942) WARTIME
American novel
set in occupied France and dealing with the Resistance.
|
LESLEY
STORM, Heart of a City (1942) WARTIME
Hit play set
during the Blitz.
|
LESLEY
STORM, Great Day (1945) WARTIME
Members of a
village Women's Institute in 1942 attempt to overcome personal and class
differences to prepare for a visit from Eleanor Roosevelt. Reviewed here.
|
NOEL STREATFEILD, The Winter Is Past (1940) WARTIME
Lovely, funny,
surprisingly gritty tale of a country house, its residents and visitors during
the drab, anticlimactic days of the "phony war". Reviewed here.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD, The Children of Primrose Lane (1941) WARTIME
Children's
adventure story written during the Blitz and making use of wartime
atmosphere.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD, I Ordered a Table for Six (1942) WARTIME
Blitz novel
tracking six individuals in the days before they'll be together in the midst
of an air raid and not all will survive.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD (as SUSAN SCARLETT), Summer Pudding (1943) WARTIME
One of her
Susan Scarlett romances, a cheerful comedy making use of wartime elements.
Reviewed here.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD, Harlequinade (1943) WARTIME
Children's
title in which a group of circus children are sent to the countryside to ride
out the war.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD (as SUSAN SCARLETT), Murder While You Work (1944) WARTIME
Light tale
combining elements of romance and mystery in a wartime factory setting.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD, Curtain Up (1944, aka Theatre Shoes) WARTIME
Children's book
set against a backdrop of the war. Note that most subsequent reprints of the
book edit out the war-related content.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD, Saplings (1945) WARTIME
Reprinted by
Persephone, a powerful examination of the ways in which the tragedies of war
scar a family.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD, Party Frock (1946, aka Party Shoes) WARTIME
Also about
children living in an English village at the very end and immediately after
the war; one character's parents are in a prison camp.
|
NOEL
STREATFEILD (as SUSAN SCARLETT), Poppies
for England (1946) POSTWAR
Romance set just after the end of the war.
|
NOEL STREATFEILD, Beyond the Vicarage (1971) RETROSPECTIVE
Third volume of Streatfeild's fictionalized memoir, in which
"Vicky" becomes an author and joins the WVS during the war.
|
NOEL STREATFEILD, When the Sirens Wailed (1974) RETROSPECTIVE
Children's fiction in which Streatfeild returns to her wartime
experiences.
|
JAN
STRUTHER, Mrs. Miniver (1939) APPROACH
One of the most
famous works of the pre-war years, a series of short pieces about a family in
Chelsea, later made into an Oscar-winning film. Struther later added pieces
set during the war.
|
ELIZABETH
STUCLEY, Trip No Further (1946) WARTIME
Wartime novel
with a heroine who always "remains the British Gentlewoman with her
sense of duty and her streak of puritanism."
|
ELIZABETH
STUCLEY, The Pennyfeather Family
(1947) WARTIME
"This is
all about a family who exchange their house in Chelsea for a little cottage in the woods, during the big
London blitz which some of you may remember."
|
GERALDINE
SYMONS, Now and Then (1977, published in the U.S. as Crocuses Were
Over, Hitler Was Dead)
RETROSPECTIVE
A time-slip
story of a girl moving with her family to a country estate and occasionally
slipping back into World War II when she befriends a gardener and his dog
from those earlier years.
|
ETHEL
M. TALBOT, The Warringtons in War-Time
(1940) WARTIME
Children's
author's foray into wartime fiction.
|
LAURA
TALBOT, The Gentlewomen (1952) RETROSPECTIVE
Novel focused on the disruptions of class identity brought about by
World War II.
|
ELIZABETH
TAYLOR, At Mrs. Lippincote's (1945) WARTIME
Taylor's first
novel wonderfully evokes the fatigue and strain of the final phase of the
war.
|
ELIZABETH
TAYLOR, A View of the Harbour
(1947) POSTWAR
After erasing the war entirely from her second novel
Palladium, Taylor presented an
atmospheric glimpse of postwar life in this work.
|
ELIZABETH
TAYLOR, Complete Short Stories
(2012) WARTIME
Includes
several early stories making use of wartime concerns and settings.
|
JOSEPHINE TEY, The Franchise Affair (1948) POSTWAR
Non-series mystery that contains frequent mentions
of the war and of postwar conditions.
|
ANGELA
THIRKELL, Cheerfulness Breaks In
(1940) WARTIME
The approach
and beginning of war as hilariously experienced in Barsetshire. A favorite of
many Thirkell fans.
|
ANGELA
THIRKELL, Northbridge Rectory
(1941) WARTIME
ANGELA
THIRKELL, Marling Hall (1942) WARTIME
ANGELA
THIRKELL, Growing Up (1943) WARTIME
ANGELA
THIRKELL, The Headmistress (1944) WARTIME
ANGELA
THIRKELL, Miss Bunting (1945) WARTIME
Other witty
wartime entries in the Barsetshire Chronicles.
|
ANGELA
THIRKELL, Peace Breaks Out (1946) POSTWAR
Barsetshire chronicle tracing the transition from
war back to peace in village life.
|
ANGELA THIRKELL, Private Enterprise (1947) POSTWAR
ANGELA THIRKELL, Love
Among the Ruins (1948) POSTWAR
Subsequent Barsetshire entries evoking immediate
postwar life.
|
SYLVIA
THOMPSON, The Gulls Fly Inland
(1941) WARTIME
Set during 1939-1940, but apparently primarily focused on interpersonal
relations.
|
SYLVIA
THOMPSON, The People Opposite
(1948) POSTWAR
Deals lightly with two postwar families, among whom is a young
invalided soldier trying to get back in the swing of things after a long
hospitalization.
|
GILLIAN
TINDALL, The Intruder (1979) RETROSPECTIVE
Novel about a young Englishwoman and her son stuck in
occupied France during World War II.
|
MONICA
TINDALL, The Late Mrs Prioleau
(1945) WARTIME
Young mystery
writer unearths secrets about her late, ogre-ish mother-in-law. Begins just
before the war and continues well into the war years. Reviewed here and available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
|
BARBARA
EUPHAN TODD, Miss Ranskill Comes Home
(1946) WARTIME
Reprinted by
Persephone, a comedy about a woman who has been marooned on an island and
returns to find England in the thick of war.
|
RUTH TOMALIN, The Spring House (1968) RETROSPECTIVE
A sequel to The
Garden House (1964), which took place before the war, this volume follows
Ralph and his guardian into WWII, living in a cottage in Sussex.
|
URSULA TORDAY (as CHARITY BLACKSTOCK), The Briar Patch (1960) POSTWAR
Novel set in Paris just after the war and featuring two teenagers, one
a Holocaust survivor.
|
P.
L. TRAVERS, I Go by Sea, I Go by Land
(1941) WARTIME
Children's
title by Mary Poppins author,
dealing with evacuated children.
|
MARY
TREADGOLD, We Couldn't Leave Dinah
(1941) WARTIME
About children
who miss the evacuation of a fictional Channel island (because they can't
leave their horse behind) and end up aiding the resistance to the Nazis.
|
MARY TREADGOLD, No Ponies (1946)
POSTWAR
Children's story about France just after the war, tackling the very
adult issue of Nazi collaborators.
|
MARY
TREADGOLD, The Polly Harris (1949) POSTWAR
Sequel to We Couldn't Leave Dinah, following
that book's children into the postwar years.
|
EILEEN
TREMAYNE, Those Who Remain (1942) WARTIME
About a London
family retreating to a small village in the early days of the war. Reviewed
at Reading 1900-1950 here.
|
PRINCESS
PAUL TROUBETZKOY, The Clock Strikes
(1943) WARTIME
Dramatic novel
set in a seaside town in France under Nazi occupation.
|
FRANCES
TURK, The Five Grey Geese (1944) WARTIME
Cheerful
romance about five young women in the Land Army.
|
FRANCES
TURK, Candle Corner (1943) WARTIME
Romance about
an RAF pilot recovering from injuries on a farm.
|
SUSAN
TWEEDSMUIR, The Rainbow Through the
Rain (1950) WARTIME
Village story
set roughly from the beginning to the end of World War II.
|
CONSTANCE
WAGNER, The Major Has Seven Guests
(1941) APPROACH
Observer: "Intelligent
thriller with good characters and dialogue, in Fascist State on eve of war.
Violet climax."
|
KATHLEEN
WALLACE, Their Chimneys Into Spires
(1939) APPROACH
About a group
of Chelsea residents coping with the approach of war.
|
KATHLEEN
WALLACE, Singing Tree (1941) WARTIME
Observer: "tells emotionally how a selfless girl loved
a boy airman whose sweetheart let him down … All very hectic."
|
KATHLEEN
WALLACE, Without Signposts (1941) WARTIME
A widow and her
children retreat to the countryside of Devon in the early days of the war,
and encounter an array of fellow evacuees.
|
E.
M. WARD, Forest Silver (1941) WARTIME
E. M. WARD, Isle of Saints (1943) WARTIME
E. M. WARD, Voices in the Wind (1944) WARTIME
Atmospheric
wartime tales by an author known for her descriptions of landscape. The first
is set in Westmorland, while the others are set in Wales.
|
D.
GAINSBOROUGH WARING, This Day's Madness
(1939) APPROACH
D. GAINSBOROUGH
WARING, Against My Fire (1941) WARTIME
D. GAINSBOROUGH
WARING, Hatred Herewith (1942) WARTIME
Controversial author's thriller-ish tales of
Nazis and the Secret Service.
|
SYLVIA
TOWNSEND WARNER, A Garland of Straw
(1943) WARTIME
SYLVIA TOWNSEND
WARNER, The Museum of Cheats (1947) WARTIME
Two collections
of stories featuring most of Warner's wartime stories, many among her very
best work. Discussed here.
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PATRICIA
WENTWORTH, Pursuit of a Parcel (1942) WARTIME
Non-Miss Silver
spy thriller set in wartime.
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PATRICIA
WENTWORTH, The Chinese Shawl (1943) WARTIME
PATRICIA
WENTWORTH, Miss Silver Deals With Death
(aka Miss Silver Intervenes) (1944) WARTIME
PATRICIA
WENTWORTH, The Clock Strikes Twelve
(1944) WARTIME
PATRICIA
WENTWORTH, The Key (1944) WARTIME
Entries in the
popular Miss Silver mystery series, all set against a background of war,
though some make more use of this atmosphere than others.
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PATRICIA
WENTWORTH, The Traveller Returns
(aka She Came Back) (1945) WARTIME
Mystery which
follows the drama when a woman believed to be dead in the war returns home
after three years.
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PATRICIA
WENTWORTH, Silence in Court (1945) WARTIME
Non-Miss
Silver, wartime mystery about a young girl accused of her wealthy cousin's
murder.
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PATRICIA
WENTWORTH, The Case of William Smith
(1948) POSTWAR
Mystery featuring prominently a returning soldier
with amnesia.
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MARY WESLEY, The Camomile Lawn (1984) RETROSPECTIVE
"Sad, funny, and whimsical … the story of one
extended family's adventures in London during the Blitz."
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DOROTHY
WHIPPLE, The Priory (1939) APPROACH
Mentioned by Delafield's Provincial Lady as perfect
wartime reading; set in the final days before the outbreak of war. Briefly
reviewed here.
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DOROTHY
WHIPPLE, Someone at a Distance
(1953) POSTWAR
Whipple’s final novel and masterpiece, highly evocative of the
postwar years as well as recalling the characters' wartime experiences.
Reviewed here.
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DOROTHY
WHIPPLE, The Closed Door and Other Stories (2007) WARTIME
Though the
title novella was published before the war, some of the other stories were
written and are set during the war.
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ELIZABETH
WHITEHEAD, Adventurous Exile (1946) WARTIME
Children's
title about a party of English schoolgirls and teachers trapped in France
during World War II.
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BARBARA
WHITTON, Green Hands (1943) WARTIME
Energetic,
optimistic novel about young women in the Land Army.
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MARJORIE
WILENSKI, Table Two (1942) WARTIME
Rare novel about
a group of women translators in the Ministry of Foreign Intelligence.
Reviewed here. Available as a Furrowed Middlebrow reprint.
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BARBARA WILLARD, The Dogs Do Bark (1948) POSTWAR
Ironic family story set at a seaside resort just
after the war.
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BARBARA WILLARD, Celia Scarfe (1951) RETROSPECTIVE
The story of a schoolmistress who has a child out of
wedlock and allows him to be adopted, but for whom the war provides a unique
opportunity.
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BARBARA WILLARD, Echo Answers (1952) POSTWAR
Woman whose lover was killed in the war becomes
entangled with a theatrical family.
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MARGUERITE
WILLIAMS, Be Merry, My Dear (1942) WARTIME
Wartime
conflict between "an amiable journalist of talent and his too
independent schoolmistress wife" (Observer).
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DESEMEA
WILSON (as DIANA PATRICK), Life Is to
Seek (1940) WARTIME
Romantic novel about young people in the early days
of WWII, by the mother of Romilly Cavan.
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VIRGINIA
WOOLF, Between the Acts (1941) APPROACH
Highly experimental novel about a village pageant,
over which the threat of war looms in subtle and symbolic ways.
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VIRGINIA
WOOLF, "Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid" WARTIME
One of her
final essays, originally appearing in The
Death of the Moth and Other Essays (1942) but often reprinted in other
collections.
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ESTHER
TERRY WRIGHT, Pilot's Wife's Tale
(1942) WARTIME
Lightly
fictionalized diary of life with her pilot husband during World War II,
including his recovery from injuries sustained in the Battle of Britain.
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ESTHER TERRY WRIGHT, The Prophet Bird (1958) POSTWAR
Novel about
a middle-class couple struggling in the postwar years.
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PAMELA
WYNNE, Pineapple Place (1946) WARTIME
Romance novel
centered on the residents of a hotel in the English countryside during the
war.
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E.
H. YOUNG, Chatterton Square (1947) APPROACH
Tale of the
inhabitants of a town square in the late 1930s, as war looms before them.
Recently released in paperback and e-book as one of the inaugural titles in
the British Library Women Writers series.
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WOW@! So many favorites here, and some new (to me) titles by favorite authors, especially Noel Streatfeild! Many thanks. Scott, for a non-Miss Silver wartime Wentworth, try "Silence in Court."
ReplyDeleteThanks again, my only sad thought here is - right now, I have no access to libraries to find most of these! DRAT! BUT - time to reread the shelves! Starting with Streatfeild's "The Winter is Past."
Thanksk again,
Tom
Tom, you are right. Silence in Court is now my favorite non-Miss Silver mystery by Patricia Wentworth. Thank you for the recommendation. And a LOT of WWII influence.
DeleteJerri
Thank you Tom and Jerri (hee hee). I had no idea about Silence in Court. I will give it a try and add it to my list when I revise!
DeleteAn Amazing new list - I hope lots more of these turn into Furrowed Middlebrow reprints.
ReplyDeleteWell done on all that work.
I hope you both and your families and friends are all keeping fit and well as we get ourselves through this very strange time.
Thank you Sue! Hope you're doing well too (and getting lots of reading done!).
DeleteAmazing list. I'm surprised to find how many of these books I've read but a lot of titles are new to me.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the hard work you must have put into this; it's a great source now.
Thanks Barbara, and be sure to let me know if there's anything I missed. I should be able to update this one more frequently than every five years!
DeleteWhat a great new list (or updated list version). I haven't had the time to go through it in detail, but I am confident that I will find lots of things to add to my TBR pile/list.
ReplyDeleteThank you Scott for all your efforts. By the way, I managed to find the time to read one book on the list, The Foolish Gentlewoman. On the whole I enjoyed it, but was a bit disappointed at the portion of the ending that applied to the young female companion. I thought the other characters had endings that were suitable for them, but I thought she was short changed. I hope that after the book ends that character finds a Happy Ending of some sort.
Jerri
Thanks Jerri! I'm glad you liked Foolish Gentlewoman. I think I particularly liked the ending because they all seemed entirely realistic and un-idealized, particularly for that immediate postwar period. Like Sharp just couldn't romanticize everything after all that had happened.
DeleteWorking my way down (and up) your list, I was reminded of Harriet Rutland. I had bought the Dean Street Press versions of her three mysteries a while back (it looks like 2015!) and read the first two, Knock Murderer, Knock and Bleeding Hooks soon thereafter, but somehow had never gotten around to her war time mystery, Blue Murder. A very cleaver mystery novel, with plenty of WWII background worked into it. However, as the introductions say, darker than the other two and without the continuing series characters. The ending is quite something, unconventional, unusual and disturbing. In some ways it reminded me of Heyer's darkest mystery, Penhallow, which was written during the war but obviously either set before the war or in an alternative England without WWII. Both were published in 1942. Both are disturbing, although with some dark humor, both focus on a dysfunctional family, both share another plot element which I can't mention due to spoilers. It would be interesting to read a comparison and contrast essay on the two.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this list, as I might never have remembered to go back and read Blue Murder. (And I can't figure out the meaning of the title. I wonder what I am missing.)
Jerri
Strangely, Jerri, I think I did the same as you. I've read the first two, but not the third. It sounds intriguing despite the darkness. I wonder if it might have been the darkness of the time that influenced both authors?
DeleteWhat about Madam, Will You Talk? by Mary Stewart for a Postwar book. Written and set in 1955, while it all takes place in France it is one of the first books to make plain to me that rationing was so extreme in England after the war. (The joke the two youngish Englishwomen on holiday in France make about being served real meat near the beginning of the book is wonderful.) Also, the plot of the mystery involves the treatment of the Jews during WWII. Her first novel, and very much a function of that time and place.
ReplyDeleteJerri
Thanks Jerri, I'll add it to my list of titles to add!
DeleteThis list is such a treat! I want all of them. I echo Jerri's suggestion of Madam, Will You Talk? (alas, my mother and I were going to trace Charity's steps in May - I hope we can reschedule our trip). I know this list is for British authors but I have to mention part of Elswyth Thane's Williamsburg novels. After the first two in the series, they are primarily set in England. The Light Heart is set before and during WWI and deals with an English girl marrying a Prussian while the next book, Kissing Kin, ends in 1934. But This Was Tomorrow and Homing are both set during WWII. I love this author so much I can't help buying duplicates - I may have to send Scott my extra copies so he becomes a fan. Thane was from Iowa but never looked back once she got to NYC - changed her name and married the Jacques Cousteau of his day, William Beebe.
ReplyDeleteTo wet your appetite for tracing Charity's footsteps, you might read about a person taking a similar journey, at the Mary Queen of Plots web site:
Deletehttps://marystewartreading.wordpress.com/2017/03/28/in-avignon/
Jerri
So much richness here!!! I adore Barbara Pym. And DE Stevenson's novels are very much on my mind these days - I think about what the Brits went thru, with food shortages, and everything else they had to endure.
ReplyDeleteA bit late to the party, I've been meaning to write with a suggested title since, well, April 2nd. Anyway, here 'tis: Experiment in Springtime by Margaret Millar, published in 1947 by Random House. Her first novel outside the mystery genre, it concerns an unhealthy marriage and the return of the wife's ex-fiancee from the war. Millar was a Canadian, of course, but she did live most of her life in the United States, so I'm guessing she qualifies. Either way, I do recommend the novel. If interested, here's my review: Experiment in Springtime.
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work! And stay safe!
Scott, Agatha Christie's Taken at the Flood has also been titled There is a Tide. That's the title of my US paperback.
ReplyDelete