The Tightening String by Ann Bridge

The Tightening String by Ann Bridge was first published in 1962 but the setting is Budapest from the spring of 1940 to Easter 1941 in Budapest. The characters are the British diplomats and their families as they experience the sensation of being in a sack with its string being pulled tighter as Italy enters the war and the Germans/Nazis take over more and more European countries.

However it’s the fate of the 44,000 British prisoners-of-war who have been captured at Dunkirk that are uppermost in the thoughts of the women, mainly the wives of diplomats. The British prisoners have almost no clothing and are freezing in their German prisons, with just one blanket to cover them and almost no food to eat.

With the Red Cross being run by old men who had been in the First World War who are absolutely clueless about how to get food parcels and warm clothing to the British men – and their refusal to be told how they should be doing it, particularly by a woman – it’s down to Mrs Eynsham the wife of the Counsellor at the British Legation to organise everything, including food donations, clothing and teaching people, including the men, to knit socks and scarves for the prisoners-of-war.

This was a great read, very atmospheric and also I think it must be very true to what the author was actually doing at the time. Ann Bridge waited over 20 years before writing about her experiences, I suspect the whole thing weighed on her chest all those years. She fairly kicks the Red Cross for being completely incompetent, certainly at the beginning of the war, I suspect that she waited until all those in control of it at the time had died off. As ever with books of this type and era the author’s frequent use of the word English when she actually means British is very annoying!

Below is the author’s note which appears at the front of the book.

Author's Note by Ann Bridge

Tidying Up

I just want to mention quickly a few books that I’ve read but hadn’t got around to blogging about. I recently finished

The Bookshop on Rosemary Lane by Ellen Berry. It was the first book I’ve read by this author who also writes under the name Fiona Gibson. Although this isn’t really the sort of book that I read I found this one to be enjoyable. I had thought it would be a real comfort read but it turned out not to be my idea of such a read.

It’s all a bit middle-age meltdown-ish as Della’s mother has just died and as if that isn’t bad enough her husband Mark is behaving like a complete idiot during his mid-life crisis involving a richer, younger woman. So far so almost cliched but when Della realises that everything in her life has been her husband’s choice – even their house and furniture, and that he pours cold water on any of her ideas, she decides that it’s time she started doing things for herself – and of course she succeeds.

The Light Hearted Quest by Ann Bridge is a book that I finished way back in October when we were on holiday. It was Joan at Planet Joan who mentioned she had been enjoying this author who was new to me. I liked this one, it was more my cup of tea with the main character Julia Probyn travelling around on a merchant ship trying to track down her cousin Colin as his father has died and Colin is needed back home. This book is the first in a series of mysteries by the author, it was published in 1956 and although I felt that the story dragged a wee bit at times, I will be looking for more of these books.

Just this week I gave up on Master of Shadows by Neil Oliver. He is of course a well-known and popular TV presenter and he has turned his hand to historical fiction but although I struggled on to page 160 of this book I decided that life is just too short to read something that I wasn’t really enjoying, and of course I have so many other books of my own that I should be paying attention to. This was a random choice from the library.

I just didn’t care about any of the characters, to me the plot such as it was seemed repetitive – it just wasn’t a page turner for me. I must say that it is very rare for me to give up on books.

So that brings my 2016 books to an end. Soon I’ll be telling you about the many books I got for Christmas.

Recent Book Purchases

I think I was in just about every charity shop in St Andrews last Saturday, sadly most of the charity shop books are newish mass market paperbacks so there’s no chance of finding really unusual books. The Oxfam shop there is better than most though and has separate shelves for vintage books. I bought an Ann Bridge book there – The Light Hearted Quest. I’m fairly sure I read some of her books years ago, but they must have been from the libary because I don’t own any others. It was first published in 1956.

One thing which has annoyed me is the pricing of book club books. The last time I was in an Edinburgh bookshop there were some books which I would’ve bought if they hadn’t had wild prices on them – with the words first edition pencilled on them too. I can’t make my mind up whether the shop owner is just a bit clueless about book pricing as the books are a sort of sideline to the ‘antique’ shop or they are hoping to fool people. The books were all 1950s and 60s book club choice books, so there is no way that they could possibly be described as first editions as the book clubs obviously only reprinted books which were already very popular. So annoying!

Anyway, back to St Andrews and I was very lucky at the actual second-hand bookshop, sadly it’s the only one left now, but I almost always find something worth buying there. This time it was a book from the Our Beautiful Homeland series, published by Gresham. I’m ashamed to say that I had never even heard of the series but I checked the internet and there are plenty available for sale there.

I picked the book up because it has a lovely cover which I was sure had been designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, he did design quite a lot of bookcovers, especially for the publisher Blackie. The book was a bit manky though but I knew it would clean up beautifully with a wet wipe – and it did. It was the same price as a new paperback book, so a real bargain then and it has 48 coloured plates of York, Ripon, Harrogate, The English Lakes and Scarborough – which are all places we have visited. The plates are by Ernest W. Haslehurst and you can see some of his work here.

our beautiful homeland book