The Last of the War Brides (Paperback)


The Last of the War Brides takes the reader from 1920's Great Britain to the late 1990's in Canada. Author Jacqueline O'Neill Dahm's writing style reminds one of a Grandma Moses painting... simple, straightforward and always from the heart. Her journey starts in London at a time when some areas were still lit by gaslights and the cries of street vendors filled the morning air. Jaqueline's mother, a free spirited, green-eyed, black haired Irish woman disappeared shortly after the author's birth. The responsibility for caring for Jaqueline and her older sister, Mamie, fell to her father, a song and dance man, vaudevillian and time-to-time housepainter. After a serious accident he was unable to fulfill his parental duties and local authorities simply dumped the two young girls into a Catholic Convent. Readers will soon meet a plethora of characters that live through and in the ensuing chapters. Harshly disciplinary nuns, wealthy and tight fisted employers of Upstairs Downstairs scullery maids and virtually enslaved cooks. Ornery landladies, free booting gypsies and a myriad of England's hawkers of seaside entertainment and culinary productions. At the ripe old age of fourteen, Jacqueline, as was customary, entered the work force, just in time for the arrival of World War II. In those days of "This may be the last time to dance," and "Let's not give a damn about tomorrow," Jacqueline lived almost around the clock. What little sleep she did manage to get was generally interrupted by the nightly Blitz. In amongst it all she fell in serious love with a Catholic priest who was a Regimental Padre. She soon realized the impossibility of the endeavour, and moved on to other, more saneattractions. In 1946, after war's end, she married a Canadian soldier from Alberta. Her journey to Canada in 1947, as one of the last war brides to do so, began a whole new chapter in her life. A chapter that not only introduced her to the cold, wind-swept prairies, but also to some coldness of shoulder provided by relatives and residents of that new land. In her writing, Jacqueline does not waste a lot of time describing grievances, rather looking for and finding the goodness in mankind. In spite of caring for an ailing husband and spirited and growing children, Jacqueline has managed to travel to many far countries across the world. Her journeys thereto are twofold... a search for information about other civilizations... and a pilgrimage to find a spiritual pathway that really makes sense.

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Product Description

The Last of the War Brides takes the reader from 1920's Great Britain to the late 1990's in Canada. Author Jacqueline O'Neill Dahm's writing style reminds one of a Grandma Moses painting... simple, straightforward and always from the heart. Her journey starts in London at a time when some areas were still lit by gaslights and the cries of street vendors filled the morning air. Jaqueline's mother, a free spirited, green-eyed, black haired Irish woman disappeared shortly after the author's birth. The responsibility for caring for Jaqueline and her older sister, Mamie, fell to her father, a song and dance man, vaudevillian and time-to-time housepainter. After a serious accident he was unable to fulfill his parental duties and local authorities simply dumped the two young girls into a Catholic Convent. Readers will soon meet a plethora of characters that live through and in the ensuing chapters. Harshly disciplinary nuns, wealthy and tight fisted employers of Upstairs Downstairs scullery maids and virtually enslaved cooks. Ornery landladies, free booting gypsies and a myriad of England's hawkers of seaside entertainment and culinary productions. At the ripe old age of fourteen, Jacqueline, as was customary, entered the work force, just in time for the arrival of World War II. In those days of "This may be the last time to dance," and "Let's not give a damn about tomorrow," Jacqueline lived almost around the clock. What little sleep she did manage to get was generally interrupted by the nightly Blitz. In amongst it all she fell in serious love with a Catholic priest who was a Regimental Padre. She soon realized the impossibility of the endeavour, and moved on to other, more saneattractions. In 1946, after war's end, she married a Canadian soldier from Alberta. Her journey to Canada in 1947, as one of the last war brides to do so, began a whole new chapter in her life. A chapter that not only introduced her to the cold, wind-swept prairies, but also to some coldness of shoulder provided by relatives and residents of that new land. In her writing, Jacqueline does not waste a lot of time describing grievances, rather looking for and finding the goodness in mankind. In spite of caring for an ailing husband and spirited and growing children, Jacqueline has managed to travel to many far countries across the world. Her journeys thereto are twofold... a search for information about other civilizations... and a pilgrimage to find a spiritual pathway that really makes sense.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Trafford Publishing

Country of origin

Canada

Release date

February 2005

Availability

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Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152mm (L x W)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

268

ISBN-13

978-1-4120-4724-1

Barcode

9781412047241

Categories

LSN

1-4120-4724-2



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