Henrietta Sees It Through by Joyce Dennys

This book is subtitled: More News from the Home Front 1942-45.

Obviously it’s a continuation of Henrietta’s War, and is every bit as good as that book. Joyce Dennys said that she didn’t know where Henrietta ended and she began. As Joyce was a doctor’s wife herself and living in the West Country she was really just embroidering her experiences, and as they were all so unusual in wartime she probably didn’t have to do too much embroidering.

In amongst the humour there is the odd bit of serious observation, sometimes explained by footnotes. One is about the up and coming White Paper which the government was preparing on the proposed formation of the NHS. In Henrietta’s April 19, 1944 letter to her friend Robert she tells him of a conversation about it which her husband has with his friend, Doctor Rival.

It makes you think, and I must admit that it makes me feel proud that whilst they were still busy fighting World War II they also had time and the inclination to set up the National Health Service. We were up to our eyeballs in debt, the financial debt to the Americans was only just payed off a few years ago, it took us about 60 years to do that. But they still managed to do it, and this crowd of politicians that we have in at the moment are doing their best to get rid of the NHS. Shame on them!

Anyway, back to the book. Spookily, the May 16th, 1945 letter to Robert reports that it is snowing, just as it was today in the west of England, so the weather wasn’t any better then. In this book Henrietta reveals herself to be a booklover and when there is a Red Cross campaign for book donations she has a difficult time of it, which books can she part with? She gets out her copy of The Princess and Curdie, but then thinks again as she might need it for future grandchildren. She sometimes wakes in the night, in anguish over the books which she has lent to people over the years – never to see the people or books again! We probably all know how that feels!

I was really sorry when the book came to an end, especially as she doesn’t seem to have written anything else in a similar vein. I enjoyed being part of Henrietta’s world, but it struck me that in reality the end of the war was a brief joy for a lot of people, then after the celebrations they were bereft because they knew that everything was going to be changing and terrible as it may seem, the war was the best time of many peoples’ lives. They felt useful, they all had a common enemy and there was always so much going on, organising to be done and fund raising for Spitfires and such. Joyce Dennys seems to have captured the atmosphere of her times in an amusing way, which obviously went down well with Sketch readers during the long hostilities. Another hoot and a comfort read, perfect for when your brain feels more akin to spaghetti than grey matter!

2 thoughts on “Henrietta Sees It Through by Joyce Dennys

  1. Oh this is a must read for me! I haven’t read Henrietta’s War, so I’ll have to look out for both books. Have you read ‘Our Longest Days: A People’s History of the Second World War’ by the writers of Mass Observation? I think it’s fascinating and brings it home to you just what it was like living during that time.

    I think our NHS service is marvellous – OK, so it’s not perfect and things do need improving, but from our own experiences and from watching the recent batch of TV programmes that show what a wonderful job the NHS does, D and I are so grateful and amazed at all the good work that gets done.

    • Margaret,
      I think you will really enjoy these books, your library should have them. Thanks for telling me about Our Longest Days, I’m going to be looking for that one.

      I think the same about the NHS – it may not be perfect but they really pull out the stops when they have to. It’s the jewel in our crown and it makes me furious when I hear the lies which are bandied about in other countries, slagging off the NHS.

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