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The Shrapnel Pickers by George Schofield β€” book cover
World War II - War Narratives, World War II - Social Aspects, Regional British History - London, World War II - Personal Narratives, 20th Century British History - World War II, Great Britain - World War II, World War II Narratives

The Shrapnel Pickers

by George Schofield
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Overview

The Shrapnel Pickers tells two stories. The main theme is the true first person account of a boy's life in war torn England. From the London Blitz, through evacuations to the well-bombed midlands, and back in time for rockets and flying bombs, the reader is led through encounters with the black market, rationing, nights and days in air raid shelters; pubs, music halls and playground fights. The writer takes us through the action-filled, sometimes tragic, sometimes comic, events of his childhood.

With each chapter there is a chronological list of the major world events happening in the big war.

The author now lives in New England, and after 11 September 2001 he must have thought his life had come full circle. The New York of 2001 felt a lot like the London of 1940, with the same civility, helpfulness and comradeship. "It did not last, of course," he says. "As in London after the bombing, as soon as the danger seemed over ... everyone went back to normal!"

Synopsis

The Shrapnel Pickers tells two stories. The main theme is the true first person account of a boy's life in war torn England. From the London Blitz, through evacuations to the well-bombed midlands, and back in time for rockets and flying bombs, the reader is led through encounters with the black market, rationing, nights and days in air raid shelters; pubs, music halls and playground fights. The writer takes us through the action-filled, sometimes tragic, sometimes comic, events of his childhood.

With each chapter there is a chronological list of the major world events happening in the big war.

The author now lives in New England, and after 11 September 2001 he must have thought his life had come full circle. The New York of 2001 felt a lot like the London of 1940, with the same civility, helpfulness and comradeship. "It did not last, of course," he says. "As in London after the bombing, as soon as the danger seemed over ... everyone went back to normal!"

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Book Details

Published
March 1, 2005
Publisher
Xlibris Corporation
Pages
276
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781413478280

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