West End Girls
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- £5.49
Publisher Description
A vivid and compelling memoir recounting the real lives, loves and friendship of 1940s Soho and its working girls.
Barbara Tate was 17 when she heard the whispered word that would change her life: Soho. It would take four years for Barbara to escape her loveless home but when she finally made it to the forbidden streets of Soho - just as London was recovering from the trauma of the second world war - things would never be the same again.
There the naive Barbara meets the beautiful and capricious Mae. When she takes a job as Mae's maid, Barbara imagines she'll be housekeeping. But down a shabby backstreet, Barbara discovers the secret lives of Soho's working girls.
An astonishing world full of fierce friendships and bitter rivalries, dangerous men and desperate measures, Barbara soon learns that taking the money from a staggering supply of punters and making copious amounts of tea are only the bare essentials. She will need to be nursemaid, protector and confidante to impossible, adorable, self-destructive Mae.
Customer Reviews
Excellent
Excellent. Well written and sometimes very funny
Westend Girls
A delicate subject so well written it inspires a sense of awe, and I guess puts into perspective the life style both working girls and their maids lived. Barbara's story could have been the story of any maid working to make ends meet in post war Britain. I suspect girls and their Maids have similar stories to tell today.
Mrs AWM
Loved this book - read it in a day!