Become a Member
Books

Review: Goodbye East End

Comfortable ride on the crest of a wave of nostalgia

September 17, 2015 12:40
East End mothers gathered in preparation to send their children away from the city’s shelters to Gloucestershire

By

David Herman,

David Herman

2 min read

By David Merron
Corgi, £6.99

Since the 1970s, a powerful genre has emerged: novels and dramas about child evacuees during the Second World War. Some of the best-known titles are Nina Bawden's Carrie's War, Jack Rosenthal's The Evacuees and Michelle Magorian's Goodnight Mr Tom. They are all moving accounts of displacement and culture-clash, describing how children from the East End, often Jewish, came to terms with being moved to very different parts of Britain, placed with uncomprehending, sometimes even unwelcoming families.

Born in the East End in 1931, David Merron was evacuated when war broke out as a young child with his older sister, Rita, and his classmates from Buckle Street Jews' Infants' School. His memoir, Goodbye East End, is a clearly written, accessible account of his experiences.

Anyone who has read a few books in the genre will recognise many of the key episodes early on: David and his sister are the last to be offered a home; he initially gets settled at the local vicarage; later, when he joins Rita with a childless couple, there is the trauma of being offered pork sausages; and there is the first encounter with an angry farmer when he's caught stealing apples. So far, so familiar.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.