An important social history record, these are ‘the first-hand stories of ten of the last surviving female members of Britain’s greatest generation.’ Fisher interviewed ten very diverse women, whose roles during WW2 ranged from wireless operator and coder, munitions factory worker, nurse, pilot in the Air Transport Auxiliary, plotter in the Women’s Royal Naval Service, Bletchley Park paraphraser, wireless operators in the Women’s Auxiliary Airforce and the Auxiliary Territorial Service, Secretary in the Cabinet War Rooms, Land Girl in the Women’s Land Army.
At the time of their war service, these women were in their teens and early twenties. Moved by a strong sense of wishing to aid the war effort, in many cases they left home to unknown destinations to train and work, not seeing their families for months at a time, and living in dangerous and uncomfortable circumstances. One woman, Ena Collymore-Woodstock, who was 103 years old when the book was written, travelled from Jamaica to answer the call of duty and train as a radar operator. Obviously, all the contributors to this book have now reached a very great age.
One of the unifying factors of their stories is that many of the women haven’t spoken of their war experiences until recently - either because they wished to put them behind them, or because they had signed the Official Secrets Act. It is important therefore that these stories are now on record. I was interested to read these accounts; my mother was too old to be in the Services in the U.K. and was busy raising a family in the difficult circumstances of a World War, while my older sisters were children in the war years. So I have no family stories of life in the Forces in the U.K., and it was wonderful to read a woman’s perspective.