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National Service
Oct 27, 2024 6:23 PM

Author:Richard Vinen

National Service

Winner of the Templer Medal and the Wolfson History Prize

Sunday Times Top 10 Bestseller

Richard Vinen's National Service is a serious - if often very entertaining - attempt to get to grips with the reality of that extraordinary institution, which now seems as remote as the British Empire itself. With great sympathy and curiosity, Vinen unpicks the myths of the two 'gap years', which all British men who came of age between 1945 and the early 1960s had to fill with National Service.

This book is fascinating to those who endured or even enjoyed their time in uniform, but also to anyone wishing to understand the unique nature of post-war Britain.

Reviews

Vinen's clever and careful book is surely the definitive history. The era of national service now seems like ancient history, but from the routines of the parade ground to the horrors of Korea, Vinen restores it to life with a searching eye for detail and impressive human sympathy

—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday Times BOOKS OF THE YEAR

Written with compassion and insight, Vinen's book brilliantly recreates the atmosphere of postwar Britain

—— Tony Barber , Financial Times BOOKS OF THE YEAR

National Service may prove to be the most original social history book of 2014. The book is bigger than its ostensible subject, embracing class, masculinity, sexuality, compliance, rebellion, combat atrocities, petty crime, notions of national identity, group solidarity, the fallibility of memory and what it means to be a man

—— Richard Davenport-Hines , Guardian

Vinen has given us the kind of book that every professional historian surely wants to write: not only with a mastery of its voluminous original sources but also a sensitivity to the rich human detail, by turns authoritative, thoughtful, poignant - and funny

—— Peter Clarke , Financial Times

I can't recall ever having read so unexpectedly fascinating a book...every single page has something of great interest on it

—— Nicholas Lezard , The Guardian

His bracing polemic . . . vivid, concise . . . he has a keen eye for telling statistics . . . he also sprinkles his grim narrative with colourful eye-witness accounts . . . among the glut of books published to mark the Great War's centenary, this deserves high marks for passion and clarity.

—— Andrew Lynch , SUNDAY BUSINESS POST

Engaging writing and excellent presentation . . . a tricky yet well-crafted analysis, which adds to the revisionist school of thought with some edgy arguments, this is sure to get you thinking.

—— BRITAIN AT WAR magazine

An insightful study of generalship on both sides.

—— DAILY TELEGRAPH 'Books of the Year'

A tremendously well-written and important book and a testament to the qualities Camus lent La Peste's hero: 'humane, optimistic, tolerant, free-thinking, ever alive to injustice and acts of inhumanity'

—— Rebecca K Morris , Independent

Caroline Moorehead’s remarkable book is in essence the story of how a community, or rather group of communities, survived the travails of war with dignity. It is also a tale that gives a larger meaning to Hemingway’s macho phrase, 'grace under pressure'… Moorehead is wary of attempts to simplify history and ignore the complications of memory… What, as the last memories dim, was the truth? Moorehead’s question is implicit: is there such a thing? The reader is left with another question, equally difficult: 'what would I have done?’

—— Ian Bell , The Herald

Powerful and ultimately uplifting book … a far more nuanced account of courage - in which some Catholics did indeed help, and the links with neutral Switzerland were occasionally helpful - than previously recounted about Le Chambon

—— Anne Sebba , Jewish Chronicle

Fascinating and heartening story… Thorough, objective and readable… captivating

—— Roger Hutchinson , Scotsman

Elegant style

—— Richard Vinen , Evening Standard

Brilliantly captures the actions of an astonishing, taciturn wartime community

—— Dermot Bulger , Sunday Business Post

A story of courage and determination, of heroic individuals…and of what can be done when people come together to oppose tyranny

—— Sunday Telegraph

A unique story of courage and determination

—— Daily Telegraph

Elegant style

—— WOW247

Moorehead’s account makes for frequently moving and, at times, harrowing reading… Fascinating

—— Hanna Diamond , BBC History Magazine

[Moorehead is a] brilliant investigative journalist

—— Country Life

A work of remembrance and a moving tribute

—— Iain Finlayson , Saga Magazine

Moorehead skillfully intersperses layer after layer of historical fact with narratives of deeply human stories

—— Henriette Wentink , Reform Magazine

A moving piece, splendidly told

—— Lucy Beckett , Tablet

It’s an inspiring story

—— Peter Lewis , Daily Mail

Moorehead does an expert job in pulling together testimonies from survivors to filter myths and memories from fact to retell an extraordinary tale

—— Julia Richardson , Daily Mail

Story of courage and determination, of a small number of heroic individuals who risked their lives to save others, and of what can be done when people come together to oppose tyranny

—— Miss Dinky

Village of Secrets is crammed full of stories from survivors, tales of courage, betrayal, failure, success, hope, despair. It is a helter-skelter ride through the most extreme of human experiences

—— Susannah Perkins , Nudge
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