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Clare Francis
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Book
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Publisher | MacMillan | ||
ISBN | 978-033043942 | ||
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Reviewer
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Jayne
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It is 1946, and the eve of the harshest winter for a hundred years. Servicemen are pouring home from the war to a land beset by stringent food and job shortages, and a desperate housing crisis. As anti-Polish refugee propaganda reaches its height, Wladyslaw Malinowski, a young veteran of Monte Cassino, now stranded in a resettlement camp on the Somerset Levels, attempts to start a new life on a withy farm in the middle of the wetlands. His taskmaster is Billy Greer, newly demobbed, and itching to escape to a job in London. Stella, the local schoolteacher, has been waiting for the return of Lyndon Hanley, a hero of the Burma Campaign. But Lyndon is troubled, elusive, and ultimately unresponsive. When he goes away again, she finds herself falling for the beguiling and irrepressible Wladyslaw. As the country is brought to its knees by blizzards and coal shortages, people start to go hungry and attitudes harden. Then a death occurs on the wetlands, and it seems Wladyslaw, the outsider, will be held responsible. Homeland is Clare Francis's finest achievement. Atmospheric, rich in description, it depicts with dramatic power the turbulence of a country beggared by war, and the uncertainties of the men returning to it.
Review
It is 1946 and the eve of the harshest winter for a hundred years. Servicemen are coming home fast from the war to a land beset by stringent food and job shortages, and a desparate housing crisis. As anti-Polish-refugee propaganda reaches its height, Wladyslaw Malinowski, a young veteran of Monte Cassino, he attempts to start a new life on a farm in the middle of the wetlands. His taskmaster is Billy Greer, newly demobbed and itching to escape to a job in London. Stella, the local schoolteacher, has been waiting for the return of Lyndon Hanley, a hero of the Burma Campaign. But Lyndon is troubled, elusive and ultimately unresponsive. When he goes away again, she finds herself falling for the beguiling and irrepressible Wladyslaw. As the country is brought to its knees by blizzards and coal shortages, people start to go hungry and attitudes harden. Then a death occurs on the wetlands, and it seems Wladyslaw, the outsider, will be held responsible.
A great story with a number of twists and turns, for those who were not alive at the end of the Second World War it is an eye opener to what the country went through and the struggles their were for people and animals alike to live a normal life.

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