Behind the Scenes in the Vintage Years
Book
Arthur Bourne was at the centre of British motorcycling from 1923-1951. This is his fascinating...
Top of the Pops: 50th Anniversary
Patrick Humphries and Steve Blacknell
Book
'It's Number One - it's Top of the Pops'. It's not just the story of a long-running television...
Parade's End: Some Do Not...; No More Parades; A Man Could Stand Up -; The Last Post
Julian Barnes and Ford Madox Ford
Book
Booker Prize-winner Julian Barnes introduces Ford Madox Ford's masterpiece Parade's End - now a...
ClareR (5726 KP) rated You Will Be Safe Here in Books
May 12, 2019
My dad told me about the concentration camps during the Boer war as I went off to study German at university. He’d read about the history part of the course I’d be studying, and WW2 was missing. He thought it important that I should know that the National Socialists had got all of their ‘best’ ideas from the British (“everyone should shoulder their share of guilt”). I admit I didn’t know this much detail though.
The descriptions in this book are heartbreaking. Cruelty disguised as safe-keeping. New Dawn is cruelty disguised as (re)education. As I attempted to empathise with Will’s mother, I couldn’t help but judge her - how could a mother NOT protect her child? How could she be so easily influenced to give him to someone else to ‘make him a man’? She thinks that this IS protecting him though. The world is a harsh place, and those who are different are not always accepted by their peers (I have two sons, one of whom is disabled. I’ve always worried about how he will be accepted by other children - unfounded worries so far, as it turns out.).
The old adage ‘cruel to be kind’ is just that though: old, outdated. The new world order should be about tolerance and understanding, something that is totally lacking in some of the characters of this book (and out in the real world, too). ADHD is NEVER cured with cruelty. Respect is never gained through starvation and deprivation.
This book is written with such care and understanding: I could imagine the sights and sounds of both camps, smell the cigarette smoke of Willem’s grandmother. I felt so much for Sarah van der Watt and her son and Willem. People put into impossible circumstances. The way we find out about what happens to Sarah and her son is devastating: Willem and his class visit Bloemfontein concentration camp, and Fredericks story is part of their history lesson. This was so cleverly done, and although seemingly detached by the years that had passed, its only one hundred pages or so for the reader.
This is such a moving story, and it shows that history really can affect the present day. I can’t recommend reading this book enough.
Margaret Thatcher: The Authorized Biography, Volume Two: Everything She Wants: Volume two
Book
The sensational second volume of Charles Moore's bestselling authorized biography of the Iron Lady...
Margaret Thatcher: Volume Two: The Authorized Biography : Everything She Wants
Book
The sensational second volume of Charles Moore's bestselling authorized biography of the Iron Lady...
The South African Gandhi: Stretcher-Bearer of Empire
Book
In the pantheon of freedom fighters, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi has pride of place. His fame and...
Cosmo Lang: Archbishop in War and Crisis
Robert Beaken and Rowan Williams
Book
The period 1928-1942 saw some of the greatest political and social upheavals in modern British...
The Prince George Diaries
Book
The Prince George Diaries is a new comedy about the Royal Family told from the inside out. Great...
Top Gear: the Cool 500
Book
Ever since Karl Benz first powered up his Patent-Motorwagen in 1885, man has salivated and swooned...