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For six years the people of Britain endured bombs and the threat of invasion, and more than 140,000 civilians were killed or seriously wounded. Men and women were called to serve in the armed forces in record numbers, and everyone experienced air raids and rationing. In these terrible times, volunteers of almost every age, class and occupation wrote diaries for the "Mass Observation" project, which was set up in the 1930s to collect the voices of ordinary men and women. Using many diaries that have never been published before, this book tells the story of the war - the military conflict, and, mainly, life on the home front - through these voices. Through it all, people carry on living their lives, falling in love, longing for a good meal, complaining about office colleagues or mourning allotment potatoes destroyed by a bomb.… (more)
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Our Longest Days: A People's History of the Second World War by Sandra Koa Wing

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I thoroughly enjoy these first hand accounts of WWII, but if you find it a bit daunting to read at one sitting, they are easy to leave and come back to.

However, this is not how I read these Mass Observation Project books. I read this over the course of a week, and felt like I had visited with the narrators. Sandra Koa Wing, the Editor, did a great job of selecting entries from a diverse age-group, and giving different view-points for the exact dates of events. The entries are candid, down-to-earth, and poignant,and do not regret one minute sharing their journey. ( )
  Melline | Aug 13, 2022 |
I thoroughly enjoy these first hand accounts of WWII, but if you find it a bit daunting to read at one sitting, they are easy to leave and come back to.

However, this is not how I read these Mass Observation Project books. I read this over the course of a week, and felt like I had visited with the narrators. Sandra Koa Wing, the Editor, did a great job of selecting entries from a diverse age-group, and giving different view-points for the exact dates of events. The entries are candid, down-to-earth, and poignant,and do not regret one minute sharing their journey. ( )
  TheAcorn | Nov 8, 2019 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Our Longest Days is another arm of the vaguely leftwing 1930s move from elite historiography and culture to 'ordinary lives', as also depicted in documentaries by the General Post Office and various industries. Mass Observation recruited people from all walks of life to record their daily experiences and thoughts, producing an archive of fascinating and often quietly heartbreaking material, of which this collection is a representative sample.

The view of the British produced is one of variety, but also of a general refusal to quail in the face of misery. People 'get on with things', endure hardship stoically, often comforted by their knowledge that everybody's in the same boat. Perversely, the small deprivations are upsetting - shortages of butter and other staples, for example.

All in all, a fascinating collection giving you an insight into the kind of history that otherwise would have gone unnoticed.
  aidanbyrne | Oct 5, 2009 |
This is a compilation of several diaries from World War II collected by the Mass Observations project. This project was designed in the 1937 to see what the people of Britain were really thinking. In the beginning, the writers responded to prompts, but by the start of the war they were asked to keep diaries of their thoughts, feelings, and actions for posterity. These diarists are surprisingly intimate, giving details of their own lives in far more detail than those of the war, and this collection aims to give us a closer look into how the public really dealt with the war.

I found these diaries to be absolutely riveting. The book is filled with the everyday life of people going about in war for five years of their lives. Their lives all change in ways they probably didn’t imagine - some of them say so, like Muriel Green who becomes a gardener for the cause - and it’s absorbing to watch it happen. I thought the most striking thing about the diaries was that they were not overly dramatic and the people in them did not seem very dismayed by the thought that a bomb could kill them at any time. Sometimes nearby houses are destroyed with people in them but the diarist in question always remains remarkably calm. They’ll remark on the bombing of another town, but never seem worried that their own is next, although I’m sure they must have been. The only outpouring of emotion was from a man who lost his brother in the war, which results in some of the saddest and somehow most beautiful passages conveyed in the book.

Mostly, though, this book is a story full of the little things, improvising meals, shopping for clothes, trying to see sweethearts, job-hunting, dealing with the blackout, a robbery, births, deaths, dances, and kisses. All the ordinary bits of life go on amidst a country struck by war. People are people even when the Germans threaten to invade and sirens rush them into bomb shelters multiple times a day. Even more interesting is considering what these reactions say about the British public at large during World War II. It would be truly fascinating to compare these diaries with newpapers and other media produced at the time in order to see the differences in reaction to the war.

I was a little disappointed to discover that most of the diarists were given pen names since their families could not be contacted for permission, but it’s understandable. Apparently the Mass Observation project was viewed in some circles as spying, since diarists gave details of not only their own lives but their neighbors’ as well without permission. So in this book, names are shortened to a single letter if permission has not been given and summaries of diarists’ lives are reduced to a few lines regarding what they were doing in the war.

Overall I’m delighted to see a historical archive like this published and I can only imagine how amazing it would be to work in such an archive as is still going on now. I have another book of theirs on my shelf; it is the post-war diaries of Nella Last, one of the most prolific diarists and one whose family has given permission for her real name to be used. It’s called Nella Last’s Peace. I’m very much looking forward to it; I’ll be reviewing it in March.

And a final note, I discovered after completing the compilation that the editor, Sandra Koa Wing, passed away aged only 28 in 2007 after a battle with cancer. I think this wonderful book is a tribute to her since her future career in history was cut so tragically short.

http://chikune.com/blog/?p=423 ( )
  littlebookworm | Feb 7, 2009 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I enjoyed reading this book although I was saddened by the untimely and early death of the author shortly after the manuscript had been completed. She would undoubtedly have added further volumes to this collection.

Reading of their every day lives and often their humdrum existence and their fears and worries brings to life other more literary stories of wartime effort; it's probably no coincidence that I also enjoy the TV series "Foyle's War" which also manages to pick up much of the trivia from that time that might lie unforgotten, and weave it into rather their quaint wartime detective stories.

It does make me wonder whether "we" are doing something similar today to record our lives in today's world- or whether "we" are all expecting the internet and TV to do it for "us" .
  xtofersdad | Jun 30, 2008 |
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For six years the people of Britain endured bombs and the threat of invasion, and more than 140,000 civilians were killed or seriously wounded. Men and women were called to serve in the armed forces in record numbers, and everyone experienced air raids and rationing. In these terrible times, volunteers of almost every age, class and occupation wrote diaries for the "Mass Observation" project, which was set up in the 1930s to collect the voices of ordinary men and women. Using many diaries that have never been published before, this book tells the story of the war - the military conflict, and, mainly, life on the home front - through these voices. Through it all, people carry on living their lives, falling in love, longing for a good meal, complaining about office colleagues or mourning allotment potatoes destroyed by a bomb.

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