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206 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1943
When war broke out in September we were told to expect air raids. Christopher, who was five, had been visiting his grandparents in the country. His father and mother decided that he must stay down there with his aunt, and not come back to London until the war was over. His mother, Dy, went away to join him.
The father, Richard Roe, had joined the Fire Service as an Auxiliary. He was allowed one day’s leave in three. That is, throughout forty-eight hours he stood by in case there should be a fire, and then had twenty-four in which he could do as he pleased.
Almost twelve months to a day after this conversation Richard was number one, that is in charge of a pump, called during the night blitz to an incident at which two heavy bombs had fallen within a hundred yards of each other.
he came out into a gin-clear air pasted with blue moonlightMost of the novel unfolds in the early months of 1940 in London where Richard Roe, the narrator, apolitical and upper class like Green himself, is serving on the London Auxiliary Fire Service; the big events (Hitler's invasion of Norway, the fall of France, Dunkirk) feel far away. When the Blitz finally hits we hear of it only elliptically, when Roe, recovering from injuries back at his country house, describes it to his bored-but-patient wife. Even then the story reverses itself.
"The first night," he said, "we were ordered to the docks. As we came over Westminster Bridge it was fantastic, the whole of the left side of London seemed to be alight."This isn't a page turner, not even close, but there are elemental echoes of England that reminded me of passages from DH Lawrence or John Cowper Powys, as well as the distinctive voices of men and women that burn and buzz and disappear into the static of the past.
(It had not been like that at all�)
The story examines how people are kept apart by social and sexual differences and studies their attempts to affect and really feel sympathy for each other. It is a realist novel, exposing social and class contradictions. p.422