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About
Fleeing the heavy bombing in Kent in 1940, Anthea Toft was eight years old when she arrived with her mother to live on a remote farm in deepest Shropshire. The contrast between her sheltered middle-class life in the Home Counties, and that of the hard-working rural existence of the farming folk with whom she found herself, is vividly recorded in this remarkable account.
A sensitive and nervous child, Anthea recalls with astonishing clarity the events that changed her young life at that time.
A fascinating snap-shot of the farming communities and a lost way of rural life in Shropshire during the second world war.
Anthea's account as a child-evacuee is interspersed with photographs and highlights from letters written between her parents at the time.
A sensitive and nervous child, Anthea recalls with astonishing clarity the events that changed her young life at that time.
A fascinating snap-shot of the farming communities and a lost way of rural life in Shropshire during the second world war.
Anthea's account as a child-evacuee is interspersed with photographs and highlights from letters written between her parents at the time.
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Reviews
"A fascinating snap-shot of the farming communities and a lost way of rural life in Shropshire during the second world war."
Ludlow Journal