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Nella Last's War: The Second World War Diaries of 'Housewife 49' (Unabridged)
 
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Nella Last's War: The Second World War Diaries of 'Housewife 49' (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by Nella Last (Author), Carole Boyd (Narrator)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)
List Price: £28.16
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 11 hours and 30 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: AudioGO Ltd.
  • Audible Release Date: 5 Sep 2007
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQ81UU
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (38 customer reviews)
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Product Description

In September 1939, housewife and mother Nella Last began a regular diary that lasted for 30 years. The account that she left of life during the Second World War is moving, fascinating, and unique. While Nella's younger son joined the army, she and the rest of the family tried to adapt to the transformed rhythms of life in Barrow-in-Furness, which suffered terribly from enemy bombing raids. Writing each day for the "Mass-Observation" project, Nella's diary entries tell a powerful story about the war years, covering everything from sex to the genuine fear of invasion. This was the period in which Nella reviewed her life and her marriage - which she eventually compared to slavery.

Edited by Richard Broad and Suzie Fleming.

©1981, 2006 Richard Board, Suzie Fleming, and Falling Wall Press Ltd; (P)2007 BBC Audiobooks Ltd

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
101 of 102 people found the following review helpful
By P. Kaye
Format:Paperback
Having seen Victoria Wood's wonderful period drama last year, Father Christmas heard my request and kindly brought me the book.

I have deliberately taken several weeks to read it because I wanted to savour and enjoy it to the full.

We are so lucky that Nella Last decided to join the Mass Observation Project as she had a natural talent for writing about the everyday "nitty gritty" of the war years. Even though most of us will have heard stories from parents and grandparents about life in the war, inevitably they will be dominated by what the men did. This is wartime life on a daily basis as seen through the eyes of a middle-aged woman who happily writes about everything - shopping, cooking, worrying about her sons, her health, her inexhaustible wish to "do something", sleep deprivation, sex (yes, sex!) - it's all there. Obviously the MOP sent out questionnaires from time to time requesting particular information, but Nella uses her diary to chronicle her innermost thoughts with a very heavy emphasis on her marriage, her undying love for her boys and especially "a woman's lot". She could see that when the war was over (assuming that Germany did not win) life would be very different for young women about to embark on marriage. They would not be happy to spend their entire life fitting everything in around their husband's wishes and needs and she was very envious of this.

She does not give many details regarding her life before the Second World War but it is very easy to read between the lines and realise that her bouts of ill health and depression were obviously very strongly linked to a dominent and domineering husband and in-laws.

However, the war is the making of Nella as she demonstrates again and again her various artistic talents, her inexhaustible energy and her undying positive and optimistic spirit - at least when other people are present.

I loved this book so much for its honesty, detail and courage and was so very sad when I reached the end. I bought it as a birthday present for one friend and have lent my copy to another, by the time I get it back I will probably read it again!
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35 of 35 people found the following review helpful
what a wonderful book 29 July 2007
By Demdike
Format:Paperback
Without a doubt this has got to be one of the most wonderful, thought provoking, emotional yet rewarding books I've ever read. There wasn't a single part of this book I didn't like, I wanted to savour every bit of it. Nella Last is someone who I came to greatly admire. She was resourceful, kind, helpful and very sensitive and thoughtful.
She always strived to do the best by her family and look after others - and despite her own nerves, depression and anxiety she did a sterling job. I felt such empathy with her when she described her anxieties, her tears and her down days - even though our experiences are poles and decades apart - nothing really changes in the human psyche.
I loved her vivid descriptions of the food she cooked, how she scrimped and saved and put by and still managed to create all these nourishing meals so that her husband and her sons didn't go hungry. How she found time to do all she did is a mystery, but she did it and it was people like her that kept our country going.
I'm really sorry to have finished the book and not have any more of it to read such was the quality of the writing. I felt as though I knew all the family, and was party to so many secrets.
I can't really find enough superlatives to describe it - a required read for anyone interested in history or anything to do with the Wars. Nella's beautifully honed prose is a delight to read, and something that Victoria Wood also captured beautifully in her reworking of the diary for TV.
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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful
Spellbinding! 20 July 2007
By TJerram
Format:Paperback
In a time when families were being ripped apart, friends and their children were being killed and you didn't know what the future would bring Nella Last detailed every emotional day. My heart went out to her and women like her, who must have wondered what was happening to the world. Apart from detailing everything from recipes, shopping lists and her work at the centre and shop, it tells us of her hopes for future generations, how her heart goes out to other nationalities including the german mothers who were loosing their sons too. She has a modern mind, quite the opposite of what you would think of a 50 year old woman in the early 1940's. Non judgemental and always looking on the bright side despite her own personal battle with nerves and a domineering husband.

She is an inspiration to modern women, how well would we cope in the same austerity and daily horror?
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
A true reflection of life during the 2nd World War
Nella Last's diaries showed how wartime, with all the hardships and pain, in many ways enabled women to free themselves of the burden of being tied to the house and dominance of... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Isobel Norris
Wonderful
A wonderful account of the day to day life of an " ordinary" person during the war. Most books deal with the big things in a war but Nella tells you the things you never hear... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Rex Earnshaw
What my Mum went through.
Gosh this is an amazing book. I love it. I may be a bit biased as I am from Barrow. Love Nella and everything about it. Wow.
Published 3 months ago by catwoman
thoughts of a time gone by
what an amazing account of her diaries.heard so much about those times from my own mother but being young then never took too much notice when i think back now it was like living... Read more
Published 6 months ago by cassa
Nella Last's War
I ordered this book to be sent to a friend. She rang me two days later to say it had arrived safe and sound, and very safely wrapped. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Moya
Those were the days alright...
We read this after hearing Nella's story on TV by Victoria Wood. It's fabulously written and certainly takes you back. A very personal book and we're just glad to have read it.
Published 10 months ago by P. Freeman
Quite good.
Quuite good. Having seen the tv adaptation
was interested to read the original.
Not as interesting as I had anticipated,but
found what their meals consisted of quite... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Mrs. M. E. Garaty
A good read
I very much enjoyed this book. Although nothing like the tv dramatisation I could see the characters as
I read the book. Read more
Published 14 months ago by pattyg
Compelling
This book was recommended to me and I'm finding it hard to put it down.
I've warmed to Nella and her tales of every day life, her observations and the way she's coping in the... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Bob
Tales of the unexpected
Against the grey background of post-war struggles, Nella Last reveals both the mundane details and pressures of an ordinary life (the weariness, the ever-present bureaucracy)and... Read more
Published 22 months ago by E. A. Dent-smith
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