Yours Cheerfully
eBook - ePub

Yours Cheerfully

A Novel

  1. 288 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Yours Cheerfully

A Novel

About this book

From the author of the “jaunty, heartbreaking winner” (People) and international bestseller Dear Mrs. Bird comes a charming and uplifting novel set in London during World War II about a plucky young journalist and her adventures as wartime advice columnist.

London, November 1941. Following the departure of the formidable Henrietta Bird from Woman’s Friend magazine, things are looking up for Emmeline Lake as she takes on the new challenges as a wartime advice columnist. Her relationship with boyfriend Charles is blossoming, while Emmy’s best friend Bunty, still reeling from the very worst of the Blitz, is bravely looking to the future. Together, the friends are determined to Make a Go of It.

When the Ministry of Information calls on Britain’s women’s magazines to help recruit female workers to the war effort, Emmy is thrilled to step up and help. But when she and Bunty meet a young mother who shows them the very real challenges that women war workers face, Emmy must confront a dilemma between doing her duty and standing by her friends.

As funny, heartwarming, and touching as Dear Mrs. Bird, Yours Cheerfully is an endearing portrait of female friendship and “a fruitful exploration of the solidarity among women in times of grief, love, and hardship” (Publishers Weekly).

Frequently asked questions

Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
No, books cannot be downloaded as external files, such as PDFs, for use outside of Perlego. However, you can download books within the Perlego app for offline reading on mobile or tablet. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
  • Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
  • Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
Both plans are available with monthly, semester, or annual billing cycles.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere — even offline. Perfect for commutes or when you’re on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Yours Cheerfully by AJ Pearce in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Historical Fiction. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Publisher
Scribner
Year
2021
Print ISBN
9781501170102
eBook ISBN
9781501170119

LONDON Four Months Later

Chapter 1 EVERYONE MUST DO THEIR BIT

It was two minutes to nine on a mild late-September morning and Mr. Collins was in danger of being on time. The entire editorial team looked at one another with some astonishment as we heard the doors to the Woman’s Friend office crash open and our Editor march down the corridor whistling an upbeat Big Band number, which took everyone even more by surprise.
ā€œGracious,ā€ said Mrs. Mahoney, looking at her wristwatch.
ā€œThat’s odd,ā€ said Kathleen.
ā€œPerhaps something bad has happened,ā€ said Mr. Newton, looking simultaneously mournful and ecstatic at his dramatic thought.
ā€œGood morning,ā€ said Mr. Collins, swinging into the journalists’ room as if his being prompt was perfectly normal and happened all the time, or even ever. ā€œAll well, I trust?ā€
We nodded and managed a collective Good Morning and Yes, Thank You, although it came out feebly due to the punctuality shock.
ā€œIt’s before nine o’clock,ā€ I said. ā€œMr. Collins, you’re never here before nine o’clock.ā€
Mr. Collins laughed, said, ā€œSlanderous,ā€ and took off his hat and jacket, before sitting at the head of the table. In the four months he had been in charge, Mr. Collins had never managed to join us any earlier than at least a quarter past.
ā€œLots to get through,ā€ said Mr. Collins happily. ā€œI say, is that a Peek Frean? Mrs. Bussell has excelled herself.ā€
He helped himself to a broken biscuit.
ā€œMrs. Bussell has a soft spot for you, Mr. Collins,ā€ said Mrs. Mahoney, which was slightly disloyal to our tea lady, not least as Mrs. Mahoney (who would have rather died than admit it) had a soft spot for him all of her own.
ā€œMuch appreciated,ā€ said Mr. Collins, with his mouth full, leaving us unclear as to whether he was referring to the biscuit or the revelation about Mrs. Bussell’s ardour. ā€œWhere shall we start?ā€
Kathleen handed him the agenda. It was the same every week.
ā€œThank you, Miss Knighton. Patterns and Fashion, please.ā€
Kathleen looked eager to start her update, as ever meticulously prepared. Easily the cleverest person I knew, although she would fiercely deny it, Kath and I were firm friends, and I had been thrilled when Mr. Collins promoted her to Chief Subeditor. Now she was in charge of all the contributors who sent in patterns and articles, as well as overseeing Hester, our new Junior.
Hester was a good-natured, pasty-faced girl of fifteen, just out of school and prone to uncontrollable giggles. Kath was teaching her, with marginal success, that working at a magazine was not the same as being in a Cary Grant comedy, and instead involved trying to remain calm for almost all of the time.
As a result, Hester was improving, but still alternating between taking things Very Seriously Indeed, and shrieking with laughter at the drop of a hat. She was trying hard, and as Mrs. Mahoney said, it wasn’t her fault she had been blessed with Boisterous Lungs.
With Hester taking notes, Kath quickly listed what was coming up on the fashion front in the next couple of issues. Almost everything was now on the ration, and she had become an expert in making coupons go a very long way.
ā€œWe have ten ways to update an old hat, and an ever-so-easy men’s pullover where you hardly get out of a basic stitch,ā€ she said, her green eyes earnest. ā€œLots of readers wrote in liking the feature on outsize coats, and Mrs. Stevens has come up with a marvellous pattern for a knitted brassiere using unrationed yarn. Honestly, Mr. Collins, people will be chuffed to bits at that.ā€
ā€œI see,ā€ said Mr. Collins, who tended to be foggy on knits.
ā€œYes!ā€ said Kath fervently, thinking he shared her delight. ā€œThat will perk everyone up.ā€
There was a moment’s silence.
ā€œRight,ā€ said Mr. Collins.
Mr. Newton, who had been staring fixedly into his tea since Kath had said the word brassiere, looked pained.
ā€œNurse McClay has had lots of letters asking how many coupons people need for maternity brassieres,ā€ said Mrs. Mahoney, which didn’t help. ā€œI’m just saying in case Mr. Newton could get some advertisers in on the subject.ā€
Mr. Newton didn’t look as if he would like to in the least, but he nodded weakly. Hester joined in with a random guffaw.
ā€œThank you, Mrs. Mahoney,ā€ said Mr. Collins. ā€œNo need to elaborate. I’m sure Mr. Newton is on top of it. Father of three and so on.ā€
For men who worked on a women’s magazine, they were both hopeless about anything to do with what they called That Sort of Thing.
Mrs. Mahoney gave a small snort. ā€œThey should be coupon free in my view. Being a mother during a war isn’t exactly beer and skittles. Imagine how you’d feel if Baby needs a feed but you’re sitting on a Tube platform in the middle of an air raid.ā€ She looked at the men in the room as if they were wholly responsible.
ā€œThank you, Mrs. Mahoney,ā€ said Mr. Collins. ā€œI’m afraid I can’t, but I shall remember it next time I change at King’s Cross. Thank you for raising the point. Now then, if we have covered the issue of support garments, shall we move on? The readers, please, Miss Lake?ā€
ā€œWell,ā€ I said, ā€œtons of letters have been coming into Yours Cheerfully, including lots of people writing to say they were terrifically grateful for the advice about A Difficult Nan. It’s getting hard to keep up with all the problems, but that’s all right. Although I wondered if we might print some advice leaflets, so that we can help them out that way. It would be quicker than writing to everyone individually.ā€
ā€œI’m all for it,ā€ said Mrs. Mahoney supportively. ā€œYou gentlemen wouldn’t believe the pickles our readers face. Emmy’s done a very good list of the questions we get asked the most.ā€
I smiled gratefully and began to go through my plans. Despite her initial reluctance to take on the problem page, Mrs. Mahoney had quickly come to view the entire Woman’s Friend readership as an extended family to be shepherded through the challenges of growing up, settling down, and tackling middle age, all with the current possibility of death or bereavement at a moment’s notice.
Almost as soon as Yours Cheerfully had started, her calm down-to-earth advice had worked. The more letters we answered, the more we received. At the same time, she had been teaching me too. Many of the worries that readers wrote about came up time and time again, and I had learned from her response to each one. Bit by bit I had taken on more of the problem page myself, to a point that now, hundreds of letters later, I was writing much of the advice on my own. Mrs. Mahoney had final approval of everything, and I still asked her about the trickiest concerns, but after working on nearly twenty issues together, Yours Cheerfully had become almost entirely mine.
ā€œEmmy,ā€ she had said after we had worked together for some weeks, ā€œyou may be young, but you care about the readers. Don’t underestimate how important that is. Caring about getting things right is worth its weight in gold.ā€
It was one of the nicest things anyone had ever said to me, and it struck a chord. I very much did care.
When I had dreamt of becoming a Lady War Correspondent, I thought it meant you had to be chasing political stories or reporting on world-changing events. I hadn’t considered that there was an equally important job to be done on the Home Front. I may not have been crawling over bombsites or going undercover to get an earth-shattering scoop, but at Woman’s Friend I was trying to do my bit and knew we were doing something that was worth doing well.
In the past I had been at pains to tell people how I volunteered at the fire station four nights a week and I had rather downplayed working at a magazine. Volunteering with the National Fire Service felt the bigger contribution to the cause. Now I was proud of what I was doing in my daytime job.
ā€œSo that’s Yours Cheerfully,ā€ I finished, pleased that Mr. Collins said that if the paper shortage would allow it, my advice leaflets sounded a worthwhile idea.
The discussion then moved on as Mr. Collins read out updates from other contributors. Mrs. Croft from What’s in the Hot Pot? had received multiple letters following ā€œFive New Ways with Haddock,ā€ while Mr. Trevin, who did the horoscopes, was sadly behind schedule, as he had fallen over and broken his wrist.
ā€œI should have thought he would have seen that coming,ā€ said Mr. Collins.
Hester giggled and was rewarded with a small smile from our Editor, which I knew would make her entire week.
ā€œI should say,ā€ he continued, ā€œthat things are going very well—apart, of course, from the fact that we will be up the spout when Kathleen leaves, as I must tell you all I haven’t been able to even contemplate recruiting her replacement.ā€
ā€œI’m bound to be here for ages yet,ā€ piped up Kath, looking awkward. A month ago, she had put her name down to join the Auxiliary Territorial Service. Twenty-two and unmarried, she had tons of potential. None of us wanted her to leave Woman’s Friend, but the war effort needed her more.
ā€œKath’s right,ā€ I said, backing her up. ā€œWe’ve had half a dozen letters this week from readers complaining they’re having to wait for months before they even get an interview for a job.ā€
ā€œHopeless,ā€ said Mr. Collins. ā€œBut good news for us. Don’t look so horrified, Mr. Newton, I’m not being unpatriotic, I just don’t want to think about it until we have to. We all know Miss Knighton is irreplaceable.ā€
Kath looked chuffed, and Mr. Newton said, ā€œHear! hear!ā€ rather violently, to show he agreed.
Unfortunately, this set off Hester, who wasn’t at all keen on the thought of losing her mentor and let out a loud boo.
ā€œThat’ll do, Hester,ā€ said Mrs. Mahoney softly. ā€œYou’re not at the circus.ā€
Hester went puce.
ā€œOn to advertising, please, Mr. Newton,ā€ said Mr. Collins, much to her relief.
The usually congenitally pessimistic Mr. Newton reported good news, with revenues up and several new advertisers, including Sta-Blond shampoo, who had paid the full rate for a half page, and Hartley’s Jams, who were taking out a series of adverts to tell people there wasn’t any.
ā€œWell done, Mr. Newton,ā€ said Mr. Collins.
ā€œIt probably won’t last,ā€ said Mr. Newton confidently. ā€œThe National Skin Institute are late in paying for their psoriasis series in the Classifieds, and I’ve had to have a stiff word with Senior’s Meat and Fish Pastes about the same thing. I’ll get it out of them, don’t you worry.ā€
Mr. Collins sympathised and added he had heard rumours circulating about something big coming up for blancmange.
ā€œSay no more, Mr. Collins,ā€ said Mr. Newton. ā€œI’ll get onto it at once. We missed out on custard for Christmas last year and I won’t let that happen again.ā€
With Mr. Newton now on a mission, Mrs. Mahoney gave a Production update, which she managed without any mention of brassieres or feeding babies at all, and by a quarter to ten we had successfully arrived at Any Other Business.
As typically there wasn’t any other than when Mr. Newton issued a grim warning about fire hazards in the office (he was an Air Raid Precautions warden and took what he referred to as Lurking Dangers very seriously indeed), we all started to pack away our things in anticipation of the meeting coming to an end.
ā€œHold your horses, everyone,ā€ said Mr. Collins. ā€œIf I could just keep you a moment longer, I wanted to let you know that on Friday I shall be attending a meeting at the Ministry of Information.ā€
He could not have sounded more casual if he tried. Everyone stopped in their tracks. There were a couple of excitable I Says, and Mr. Newton said, ā€œWalls have ears,ā€ rather unnecessarily.
ā€œIt’s all right,ā€ said Mr. Collins, ā€œI haven’t joined the War Cabinet, although if any of you turn out to be fifth columnists, I shall be sad. And in all seriousness, I would ask you all to keep this to yourselves, if you could.ā€
Everyone sat up straighter. Mr. Collins at the Ministry. This was a turn-up.
ā€œIt’s a magazine briefing. They’re a new thing, and I wanted to say that you should all give yourselves a pat on the back that Woman’s Friend has been invited. Six months ago, no one would have thought of us, but thanks to a notable team effort, we appear to have gained something of a name. It’s taken the Ministry two years of war to talk to us all, and that’s only because they finally appear to have someone in charge who understands ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Congratulations
  5. Prologue: London, Late May 1941
  6. London: Four Months Later
  7. Acknowledgements
  8. Reading Group Guide
  9. About the Author
  10. Copyright