Blood in the Trenches: A Memoir of the Battle of the Somme
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Written by Captain A. Radclyffe Dugmore of the King's Own Light Infantry, this personal memoir...
The Encyclopaedia of Liars and Deceivers
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No one likes to be taken in, but stories of deception concerning others are compelling. It can be...
Tone Psychology: The Sensation of Successive Single Tones: Volume I
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Carl Stumpf (1848-1936) was a German philosopher and psychologist and a visionary and important...
Tomorrow, Berlin
Oscar Coop-Phane and George Miller
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Berlin. A city where nightclubs stay open from Friday night till Monday morning. A city with an...
Hans Richter
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The Austro-Hungarian Hans Richter (1843-1916) was the first career-conductor to gain international...
The Devil's Doctor
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Philip Theophrastus Aureolus Bombastus von Hohenheim - known to later ages as Paracelsus - stands on...
A Peculiar Combination
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The first in the Electra McDonnell series from Edgar-nominated author Ashley Weaver, set in England...
I Escape: The Great War's Most Remarkable POW
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Of all the daring PoW escape stories that have come to light in the last 100 years and immortalized...
A Small Circus
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A Small Circus is a powerful 1931 portrayal of a German town on the brink of chaos, from bestselling...
Even though there’s a huge shortage of young men (they’ve been ‘shipped off’ to the rest of occupied Europe to ‘work’) and women greatly outnumber men, women are divided into categories, or castes. These depend on their age, heritage, reproductive status and physical characteristics, and each category is named after a significant woman in Hitlers life. Rose is a Geli, one of the elite. Young, beautiful, and most importantly, fertile.
I thoroughly enjoyed this and read it far too quickly. It had a black and white, 1950’s movie atmosphere about it, and I could easily picture the people and scenes in my head. It brought to mind The Man in the High Castle with regards to Occupation, and 1984 with regards to feeling as though you’re constantly watched - as well as the people being told how to react, think and live. This was especially evident in Rose’s job: she rewrites classics so that they’re in line with the regimes ideals: so no independent, strong females, and all the male leads are changed to Sturmbannführer (at least!).
The drudgery of everyday life made me think of how I envisaged life in the GDR - as well as only allowing state sanctioned literature, there was only one radio channel in Grand Alliance Britain, with some brave people listening to illegal foreign radio stations, knowing that this could result in extreme punishment.
When Rose goes to Widowland near Oxford (there are a few throughout the country) to find the source of a potential rebellion, she’s shocked to see older women living in abject poverty, only permitted to eat a subsistence diet and work menial jobs. But these women are intelligent, and they’re not happy in their state regulated lives. Between her reading of classic books and meeting these women, Rose begins to see what’s wrong with the world she has been living in, and this dawning realisation is so well described. We see how reading ‘subversive’ classics seems to get under her skin, and how she realises that the treatment of women is wrong in this Grand Alliance.
I could go on and on. I raced through this book, and I loved the ending, which came far too quickly!
Many thanks to Quercus for my copy of this book through NetGalley.