Home Fires Audiobook By Julie Summers cover art

Home Fires

The Story of the Women's Institute in the Second World War

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Home Fires

By: Julie Summers
Narrated by: Juliet Mills
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The basis for the PBS Masterpiece series starring Samantha Bond (Downton Abbey) and Francesca Annis (Cranford)

Away from the frontlines of World War II, in towns and villages across Great Britain, ordinary women were playing a vital role in their country’s war effort. As members of the Women’s Institute, an organization with a presence in a third of Britain’s villages, they ran canteens and knitted garments for troops, collected tons of rosehips and other herbs to replace medicines that couldn’t be imported, and advised the government on issues ranging from evacuee housing to children’s health to postwar reconstruction. But they are best known for making jam: from produce they grew on every available scrap of land, they produced twelve million pounds of jam and preserves to feed a hungry nation.

Home Fires, Julie Summers’s fascinating social history of the Women’s Institute during the war (when its members included the future Queen Elizabeth II along with her mother and grandmother), provides the remarkable and inspiring true story behind the upcoming PBS Masterpiece series that will be sure to delight fans of Call the Midwife and Foyle’s War. Through archival material and interviews with current and former Women’s Institute members, Home Fires gives us an intimate look at life on the home front during World War II.
World War II Great Britain 20th Century Wars & Conflicts Women Europe Modern Military

Critic reviews

“Millions of words have been written about the military and social history of both world wars, but Summers carves out a little area of her own by examining the vital work performed by the Women’s Institute who, through its meticulous organizational skills and national network, found its finest hour in the face of conflict.” —Daily Mail (London)

“That image of defiant jam making sums up the way many see the wartime contribution of the Woman's Institute.” – The Economist

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Ok let's cover the basics. This book--Home Fires (aka Jambusters in the UK) is not a novel, not the story from the PBS series and has nothing to do with the actresses on the photo of the dust jacket. Everyone seems a bit mixed up about this book. Home Fires--the PBS TV program--is a fictionalized account of WWII and the Women's Institute drawn from this nonfiction book.

This book is a very serious, crunch the numbers, fact dense look at what life was really like in Britain. I can't say or agree that the book just focuses on the WWII years. In reality, we get so much information that looks both back to the WWI years and forward to the UK still rationing and struggling in the 1950s. The scope is much broader than I had expected and offers a picture I had not experienced until now.

At once fascinating and at the same time almost repellant in its detail of day to day, down and dirty, war time home-front survival, farming, butchering of animals and vermin control. It is a book that I dreaded listening to--but at the same time couldn't stop thinking about and talking about.

It is a cautionary tale and a story of strong, can-do women who accomplished the impossible. The TV program does not begin to do justice to the actual scope and numbers presented in the reading. The whole thing was mind boggling and gave new meaning to the idea of preparedness and self-reliance for me.

Best to go into this book understanding that while the journal entries add a human face to the bare knuckle facts--there is zero fluff and cozy to be found. I finally understand the expression that would fix itself to my great aunt's face--a survivor of WWII London--when people would romanticize the war years. It all makes sense now. This is a book I both loved and hated--much better than the TV program--but not for the squeamish.

Tread Carefully & Be Amazed

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this is an important and inspiring story of the contributions of the country women of the women's institute in England during World War II. each chapter details another aspect of their work, educating their members, caring for evacuees, growing and preserving food, collecting materials for the industries, and finally, helping to rebuild the country and move forward after the war. The story is easy to listen to, and The narrator is excellent.

an important and inspiring story.

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I have been fascinated by how the English people, especially the women got on with life despite rationing, depredation and sacrifice. This is a narrative about the Women's Institute which was the social outlet for women in the country. Their support of the war effort is something amazing. Amazing efforts like turning in 100 pairs of hand knit socks in 1 year along with all the chores which living in the country entailed. These women were awe inspiring and we can learn a lot from them.

A Fascinating and Entertaining read

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Story of the efforts of unsung heros of WW2. These women supported each other to survive and thrive despite sacrifice few of us can imagine.

The value of community

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I loved this narration informational and humbling great narrator. I would most definitely recommend to everyone.

enjoyed

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