Book Review: Christmas at War by Caroline Taggart

Christmas at WarAbout the Book

No turkey. No fruit to make a decent pudding. No money for presents. Your children away from home to keep them safe from bombing; your husband, father and brothers off fighting goodness knows where. How in the world does one celebrate Christmas?

That was the situation facing the people of Britain for six long years during the Second World War. For some of them, Christmas was an ordinary day: they couldn’t afford merrymaking – and had little to be merry about. Others, particularly those with children, did what little they could.

These first-hand reminiscences tell of making crackers with no crack in them and shouting ‘Bang!’ when they were pulled; of carol-singing in the blackout, torches carefully covered so that no passing bombers could see the light, and of the excitement of receiving a comic, a few nuts and an apple in your Christmas stocking. They recount the resourcefulness that went into makeshift dinners and hand-made presents, and the generosity of spirit that made having a happy Christmas possible in appalling conditions.

From the family whose dog ate the entire Christmas roast, leaving them to enjoy ‘Spam with all the trimmings’, to the exhibition of hand-made toys for children in a Singapore prison camp, the stories are by turns tragic, poignant and funny. Between them, they paint an intriguing picture of a world that was in many ways kinder, less self-centered, more stoical than ours. Even if – or perhaps because – there was a war on.

Format: Paperback, ebook (304 pp.)    Publisher: John Blake
Published: 1st November 2018 Genre: Nonfiction, History

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Christmas at War on Goodreads


My Review

Subtitled ‘True Stories of How Britain Came Together on the Home Front’, Christmas at War is an interesting collection of firsthand accounts and excerpts from contemporary articles, journals and letters about people’s recollections of Christmas during the years of the Second World War.

I liked the the way the author used phrases from the reminiscences as chapter headings, such as ‘You’ll Have to Have Shop Butter From Now On’.   I also loved the photographs in the book.  My particular favourite was one of an Anderson shelter decorated for Christmas which really epitomises the spirit of the contributions to the book.   One small niggle was what seemed like inconsistent formatting of the text.  However, I eventually worked out that verbatim accounts were shown in normal text and excerpts from letters or diaries shown in italics.

The book commences with evacuees’ recollections of Christmas away from their families, with some better than those they’d experienced previously and others just different.  For example, Christmas in the country versus in the city with one contributor remarking that ‘out in the country in the 1940s you were still pretty much in the nineteenth century’.  Evacuees recall new experiences – different Christmas food and traditions, for example – but also loneliness, cruelty, even physical abuse.  I was surprised to learn of the lack of government pre-planning for evacuation with organisers in some cases  knocking on doors to find people willing to take in evacuees.

In the chapter entitled ‘Thank Goodness…Now We Can Get Some Sleep’, contributors recall nights spent in public shelters when, contrary to what you might expect, they found they slept better once the air raid warning had sounded because the uncertainty was over.  Sharing a shelter with so many other people didn’t provide much privacy. ‘There was an Elsan toilet pan surrounded only by a heavy hessian curtain.   People used to time their bodily functions to coincide with bomb or gunfire or aircraft flying overhead…’ However, many recall the so-called ‘Second Great Fire of London’, the night of 29th December 1940, when a hundred thousand incendiary bombs and twenty-four thousand high-explosive bombs (yes, you read those numbers right) were dropped on London.

Much of the book is given over to reminiscences about the shortage of luxury goods and foodstuffs typically associated with Christmas and the ingenuity required to conjure up anything resembling festive fare.   Hence the many recipes for ‘mock’ something or other that prevailed at the time.  Similar ingenuity was required when it came to Christmas decorations and presents with much use of recycled items, hand-me-downs, homemade presents and gifts courtesy of ‘bring and buy’ sales.  That was unless you had useful contacts who could obtain goods in short supply or were fortunate enough to benefit from the generosity of strangers.  And, of course, with television off air for the duration of the war, with the exception of the radio, entertainment had to be of the homemade variety too: sing-a-longs round the piano, card games, board games and charades.

What really came home to me reading the book was how many of the things we now associate with Christmas were absent from people’s lives.  For example, all the church bells were silenced, only to be rung if invasion was imminent.  Gatherings of family and friends were necessarily limited by petrol rationing, evacuation, people serving overseas, loved ones confined as prisoners-of-war and restrictions on leave. Despite all of this, people continued to make a valiant effort to celebrate Christmas in whatever way they could.  Whether in hospitals, on active service overseas or even confined as prisoners-of war, people tried their best to create some festive spirit.

The book ends on a more sombre note, acknowledging that the last Christmas of the war (1944) was one of contradictions.  There was optimism that Germany was close to defeat.  On the other hand, 1944 had seen the most devastating bombardment of London, including with the dreaded ‘Doodlebugs’, killing and injuring many and resulting in the destruction of homes, businesses and infrastructure.

Christmas at War was one of the books from my NonFictionNovember reading list.   It made the perfect literary companion to a historical fiction book I read shortly before –  A Ration Book Christmas (see the ‘Try Something Similar’ section below).  I believe Christmas at War would make an ideal Christmas gift for anyone with an interest in social history or the Second World War and how it affected the daily lives of ordinary people.

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, John Blake, and Readers First.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

In three words: Fascinating, authentic, inspiring

Try something similar…A Ration Book Christmas by Jean Fullerton (read my review here)


Caroline TaggartAbout the Author

Caroline writes: ‘I was an editor for 30 years before Michael O’Mara Books asked me to write what became I Used to Know That. I think its success took everyone by surprise – it certainly did me – but it led to my writing a lot of other books and finally, after about three years, feeling able to tell people I was an author. It’s a nice feeling.

Until recently the book I was most proud of was The Book of London Place Names (Ebury), partly because I am passionate about London and partly because, having written ten or so books before that, I finally felt I was getting the hang of it.

Now I have to confess I’m really excited by my first venture into continuous narrative. For A Slice of Britain: Around the Country by Cake (AA) I travelled the country investigating, writing about and eating cake. From Cornish Saffron Cake to Aberdeen Butteries, I interviewed about 25 people who are baking cakes, biscuits and buns that are unique to their region, part of their heritage – and pretty darned delicious. The Sunday Times reviewed it and described me as ‘engaging, greedy and droll’, which pleased me enormously.’  (Photo credit: Goodreads author page)

Connect with Caroline

Website  ǀ Twitter ǀ Goodreads

Book Review: A Ration Book Christmas by Jean Fullerton

A Ration Book ChristmasAbout the Book

In the darkest days of the Blitz, Christmas is more important than ever.

With Christmas approaching, the Brogan family of London’s East End are braving the horrors of the Blitz. With the men away fighting for King and Country and the ever-present dangers of the German Luftwaffe’s nightly reign of death and destruction, the family must do all they can to keep a stiff upper lip.

For Jo, the youngest of the Brogan sisters, the perils of war also offer a new-found freedom. Jo falls in love with Tommy, a man known for his dangerous reputation as much as his charm. But as the falling bombs devastate their neighbourhood and rationing begins to bite, will the Brogans manage to pull together a traditional family Christmas? And will Jo find the love and security she seeks in a time of such grave peril?

Format: Paperback, ebook (448 pp.)    Publisher: Corvus
Published: 11th October 2018        Genre: Historical Fiction, Romance

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find A Ration Book Christmas on Goodreads


My Review

A Ration Book Christmas is a heart-warming and dramatic story of daily life in the East End of London during the Blitz.  The author creates a convincing sense of the period and of the East End.  For example, I loved the scenes set in a traditional pie and mash shop with its ‘steaming vats of stewed eels’.

At the heart of the book is the story of erstwhile sweethearts, Jo Brogan and Tommy Sweete.  For them the course of true love is definitely not smooth, not helped by the misguided (or downright malicious) intervention of people who think they know what’s best for them.   And they find themselves at the mercy of events as the war separates Jo and Tommy.  But might it also throw them together again?

Jo engages the reader’s sympathy from the moment we first meet her, standing up for her little brother Billy.  Aside from Tommy, her family and their East End home mean everything to her. ‘For Jo, home was streets  of two-up two-down houses packed so tightly you could hear your neighbours arguing after chucking-out time on a Saturday night. […] home was the sour smell of simmering hops from the Charlton Brewery or, if the wind was blowing up the Thames, the smell of the sea.  Home was where the rain glistened on the cobbled streets after a storm and each front door has a scrubbed white step denoting the diligence of the women of the house.’

Tommy and his brother Reggie had the same difficult childhood but the experience has propelled them down different paths; a choice that threatens to bring them into conflict not only with each other but with the forces of law and order.  Their story illustrates there was a darker side to the war as well: the black market, looting and criminal opportunities offered by the blackout and curfews.

However, mostly the book conveys the courage and fortitude of those who lived through this turbulent and dangerous time in our country’s history.  Alongside those on active service in the Army, Navy and Air Force (and in necessarily less conspicuous but just as dangerous roles), the Brogans and other families are involved in work on the ‘Home Front’ that is often just as dangerous: fire-watching and dealing with incendiary devices; working as drivers and First Aid assistants for St. John’s Ambulance; serving in the Auxiliary Fire Service and heavy rescue crews.

The book gives a real sense of the indiscriminate carnage of the Blitz – innocent families caught in explosions and collapsing buildings – but also the bravery of those attempting to rescue and care for them.   Ingenuity was needed as well with horse boxes pressed into service as mobile dressing stations and boy scouts used as runners.

Along with the danger of bombing raids and the ever-present fear of invasion, there’s the daily struggle to cope with food shortages and rationing.  ‘Since the introduction of rationing, it took the best part of the day just to find your basic necessities.  Once greengrocer might have potatoes but no carrots, so you’d have to go to another shop for those and possibly another for cabbage.  Having tracked down whatever it was you were after, you then had to queue with your fingers crossed they wouldn’t sell out before you got to the front.’

The book is not all doom and gloom though.  There’s some much-needed humour to lighten the mood.  For example, the wonderfully named Stella Miggles is described as ‘the girl with the slackest knicker elastic west of Bow Bridge’.  There are some fabulous female characters including Jo, Eddie, Ida and Queenie, emphasising the vital role women performed in time of war.  My absolute favourite scene in the book is Queenie’s response when Aunt Pearl comes looking for Billy.  Readers averse to a bit of lavatorial humour and earthy language should skip the following excerpt!

Marching across to the privy, Pearl banged on the door.
‘Feck off,’  Queenie shouted back. ‘I’m having a shite.’
‘I’m looking for Billy,’ Pearl bawled through the outhouse door. ‘I know he’s-‘
A rip-roaring fart cut across her words.
‘For the love of mercy,’ hollered Queenie from inside the toilet, ‘will you not leave me in peace to grapple with the squits?’

I’ll leave you to guess where Billy turns out to be hiding…

As a reader not usually drawn to books with romantic storylines, I nonetheless found myself drawn into the ups and downs of the romance between Jo and Tommy whilst being similarly engaged by the historical detail and atmosphere of wartime London.  I enjoyed the period detail about the food (Carnation milk, Ovaltine, pease pudding or fig rolls anyone?), the music and the clothing of the time. Included at the back of the book are recipes that the formidable matriarch of the Brogan clan, Ida, might have used, including for Christmas dinner – a lovely bonus.

Finally, I really liked that the cover of the book appears to use a vintage image from the period rather than present-day models who, to my mind, even if dressed in costumes from the period, somehow never look quite authentically of that time.

Read Jean Fullerton’s thoughts on why sagas, such as the ones she writes, should be considered part of the historical fiction genre in the latest issue of Historia, the magazine of the Historical Writers’ Association.

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, Corvus, and Readers First.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

In three words: Immersive, heart-warming, romantic


About the AuthorJean Fullerton

Jean writes: I was born into a large, East End family and grew up in the overcrowded streets clustered around the Tower of London. I still live in East London, just five miles from where I was born. I feel that it is that my background that gives my historical East London stories their distinctive authenticity.

I first fell in love with history at school when I read Anya Seton’s book Katherine. Since then I have read everything I can about English history but I am particularly fascinated by the 18th and 19th century and my books are set in this period. I just love my native city and the East End in particular which is why I write stories to bring that vibrant area of London alive.

I am also passionate about historical accuracy and I enjoy researching the details almost as much as weaving the story. If one of my characters walks down a street you can be assured that that street actually existed. Take a look at Jean’s East End and see the actual location where my characters played out their stories. [Photo credit: Goodreads author page]

Connect with Jean

Website  ǀ  Facebook  ǀ  Twitter | Goodreads