Description:
Praeger, 1964. Paperback. Good +. Condition Good+. Sound and square, moderate shelfwear. Cover discolored, corner bumped. A scattering of marginal notations throughout; no hideous highlighting.
Post D. Some Experiences of an Air Raid Warden. by (WORLD WAR II: BLITZ.) STRACHEY, John - 1941
by (WORLD WAR II: BLITZ.) STRACHEY, John
Post D. Some Experiences of an Air Raid Warden.
by (WORLD WAR II: BLITZ.) STRACHEY, John
- Used
- Hardcover
- first
London: Victor Gollancz Ltd,, 1941. Octavo. Original blue cloth, spine lettered in blue. With the dust jacket. An excellent copy in the sunned jacket. First edition, first impression. A memoir of the socialist theorist and politician John Strachey's experiences as a London air-raid warden; "During the war he served in a succession of postsair raid warden, public relations officer, radio commentator, and Royal Air Force wing commander. With the war's end, Strachey was returned to Parliament in the June 1945 elections and was appointed under-secretary for air in the new Labour government" (Britannica). With Victor Gollancz and Harold Laski Strachey was one of the founders of the Left Book Club. His "The Theory and Practice of Socialism (1936) was the most influential book ever produced by the club, and his pamphlet Why You Should Be a Socialist (1938) sold more than 250,000 copies within two months of its publication. As a speaker at numerous Left Book Club meetings, regular writer for its monthly bulletin, Left News, and through his next major book, What Are We to Do? (1938), Strachey was playing an important role in drawing a generation towards the left in general, and Communist Party priorities in particular" (ODNB). From the publisher's archive.
- Seller Peter Harrington (GB)
- Book Condition Used
- Binding Hardcover
- Publisher London: Victor Gollancz Ltd,
- Date Published 1941