Before I get down to the nitty-gritty of reviewing this novel we need a short history lesson:
Lidice (German: Liditz) is a village in the Czech Republic just north-west of Prague. It is built on the site of a previous village of the same name which, as part of the Nazi created Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, was, as per orders directly from Heinrich Himmler, completely destroyed by German forces in reprisal for the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich in the late spring of 1942. On June 10, 1942, all 192 men over 16 years of age from the village were murdered on the spot by the Germans in a much publicised atrocity. The rest of the population were sent to Nazi concentration camps where many women and nearly all the children were killed. - Wikipedia
There is so much history attached to Word War II that I couldn't tell you if I knew that or not. I sat and watch the whole World at War series with my dad back in 1973 so I must have heard about it. The fact is after a while the war just blurs into five years of wall-to-wall horror stories and atrocities with the odd act of heroism thrown in for good measure and it's hard to get emotional about it any more. At least 50 million people died in that war and since then we've heard many stories of entire villages being massacred in Africa and Cambodia, for example.
We have our own tragedies to mourn. Do we really need another book about World War II?
I had my doubts when I started to read this, not the author's fault I have to stress, but mine. I read the scene where the village's men are executed without batting an eye. Even the fact that the only witness is Jan (a ten-year-old boy) and one of the men is his father still left me dry-eyed. Then he returns home only to be captured by the Nazis where he sees his mother and elder sister rounded up with all the other women and shipped off to God knows where. This leaves him in charge of his little four-year-old sister, Lena.
It's hard to keep close to her though. Eventually they wind up in a children's home in Germany.
It isn't often he gets a chance to speak to Lena, for the girls and boys are kept apart most of the time. Weeks pass before he manages to find a moment when she is alone; when he tries to speak to her, he thinks she's changed. For one thing, she speaks German. When Jan talks to her in Czech, she screws up her face and tells him to speak properly.
"Only peasants speak the way you do."
Jan gazes at her wordless. It's not her fault; she doesn’t know what she's saying. Every day the women tell them lies like this, and she's only little. It's no surprise that she takes in and believes what they say to her.
"Our parents spoke this way," he reminds her.
Lena kicks a stone away. "Ich habe keine Eltern. Sie sind tod." [I have no parents. They are dead]
The blurb on the back of the book told me what to expect next. Soon his sister is removed too leaving him alone.
Now for the vast majority of kids his age that would have been pretty much the end of his story. All we would be left to find out was whether he survived the war or not. But I'm not an educational psychologist. Myant writes:
The men were killed, the women sent to Ravensbrück and some of the children were sent to Germany to be adopted. This raised questions for me as a psychologist. Quite apart from the appalling trauma of being torn from your family, what did it do to a child to have their identity stripped from them like that? Did they form bonds with their new family, how did they feel when reunited with what remained of their real family after the war, what did the people who were duped into adopting the children feel? The Search explores these issues in the story of Jan and Lena. – The Reading Agency
Virtually all the tales about the war we have are from the perspective of grown-ups with the obvious exception of The Diary of Anne Frank so I can see why this might have piqued her interest. It would never have struck me but this is what we need, the right writer to come in contact with the right material.
The book is written in the present tense, third person, so we go through this as Jan does without the benefit of hindsight. I think the present tense was a sensible choice but I would have liked, as with Anne Frank, to have a first person narrative – just a personal preference – but considering the fact there are two narrative threads she's made the sensible choice I think.
The first thread is Jan's story. A determined young boy, he decides not to sit tight and wait to see how things pan out, rather he resolves to escape from the children's home and try and locate his family. A bit of a tall order.
The second thread revolves around the Schefflers, Friedrich and Gisela, a German couple, and their grown-up son, Wilhelm, who is a soldier away at war. Having lost their own daughter they decide to adopt what they think is a German girl orphaned by the war. What they get is a little Czech girl who has been conditioned to speak German and think of herself as 'Helena'; the girl is, of course, Jan's sister, Lena.
She settles in quickly enough but they soon realise all is not right:
Upstairs, the little girl laughs. She's settling in now, though she's very quiet, and when she speaks, her words don't sound right. The accent's all wrong. When [Friedrich] mentions this to Gisela, saying he thought her language was very poor for a child of her age, Gisela frowned and shook her head. "Poor thing, what do you expect? She's lost both her parents."
"But she says so little. Perhaps she' retarded."
"Have you seen how she helps me round the house? She's smart all right, don’t you doubt it for a minute."
"But –"
"No more buts, Friedrich. She has no parents, and she's from Hamburg, That's why she sounds so different."
People believe what they want to believe . . . or what they need to believe.
Now Jan may be, as I've just said, a determined little boy but he's not especially resourceful. Like Lena he's been forced to learn German but he speaks with a Czech accent, has a very limited vocabulary (enough to do what's required of him) and cannot read German; actually he struggles to read joined-up writing full stop. It’s just as well he makes friends with an older boy called Pawel because he simply isn't equipped to make his escape alone. And, yes, of course, they both escape. It wouldn't be much of a book if they didn't. They learn the address of the farm in Germany where Lena lives and set off to reclaim her. Inconveniently, they wind up near Pawel’s home in Poland instead, but at least there they get some adult assistance and get pointed in the right direction.
Things don't work out, the boys get separated and if it wasn't for Marek, a sympathetic Resistance leader, Jan's story would probably peter out there. But it doesn't and he ends up joining a small band hiding out in the woods. This keeps him relatively safe but doesn’t help him with his task. He bides his time and waits for an opportunity which eventually comes and he gets a final shove towards his goal.
In the meantime we get to learn a bit about the Schefflers and their son who has deserted and ends up living in a hole in the ground in their barn. It's easy to see all Germans as the bad guys and certainly Jan does or at least he would like to. The thing is he keeps getting glimpses of their humanity. When he is up the tree watching the executions in Lidice a young German sees him and helps him escape before he is discovered and during an ambush he comes face to face with another German who pleads for his life before Marek shoots him. And when he finally makes his way to the Schefflers, he ends up in the middle of a situation he could never have anticipated.
In the final chapter everyone's stories collide and rarely does anyone walk away unscathed from a collision. The scars they're all left with are not what any of them could have expected. So, yes, from a plot perspective, all the i's are dotted and the t's are crossed but it's not a neat ending, not in that respect, and I was rather grateful for that because in the rest of the book the plot shows through a bit too much for my tastes. It's a little too neat; the writing is clean and professional, like a film script where the action needs a nudge forward and so things happen when they need to happen, even the unexpected bits.
Did I enjoy the book? Is this a book you're supposed to enjoy? It's a book that makes you think. The last chapter certainly makes you think. It made me think and I'm positive it will drag a tear or two out of some of you. This was a side of the war that I knew of but that was about it. Like The Diary of Anne Frank, Ian McEwan's Rose Blanche and the more recent The Boy in Striped Pyjamas this is a story worth telling. Although not marketed as a young adult novel I suspect this book is one that teenagers would get a lot from.
Having got to this point in the review I felt like I'd been nitpicking, dwelling on the negatives rather than the positives, so I contacted the publisher to see if I could ask Myant a few questions. Once you read these I'm sure you'll realise that there's a lot to recommend this book.
Both Schindler's List and The Boy in Striped Pyjamas have been criticised for presenting unrealistic, even sanitised, pictures of their chosen subjects. How important was it for you to present an accurate picture of Jan's journey? (Please feel free to outline your research for the book.)
It was very important. I started the novel when I was working for a PhD in creative writing at Glasgow University. The final thesis comprised a novel about the repercussions of the Holocaust on the lives of three women along with a 40,000 word critical essay about issues relating to writing about the Holocaust. One of the issues was that of representation of the Holocaust. In the essay I argue that there are essentially three critical responses to writing about the Holocaust - the first being that the Holocaust cannot and should not be represented, the second that testimonial accounts are acceptable and the third being that fictional responses are acceptable.
Some critics argue that it is all right for survivors to write fiction about the Holocaust but not for those who were not involved. I think that as the distance from WW2 increases and there are fewer people around who can write about it from personal experience, we will come to rely more on fictional accounts. I feel strongly that this is something we have to keep alive and I've read with dismay about research which showed that many young people are unaware of the Holocaust (a poll in 2005 suggested 60% of young people under the age of 35 were unaware[1]). Part of my essay goes on to discuss my instinctive feeling that if I were to write about this topic I had to be as accurate as possible and this seems to be the general feeling of Holocaust specialists.
Some feel that inaccurate representations can be used to lend credence to Holocaust deniers (a lot of ire is directed at a TV series of the seventies called Holocaust which was erroneously set in a work camp which in the series was alleged to be a death camp). You mention two of the well known representations which have been criticised severely by some critics. Lanzmann, for example (the director of Shoah) took issue with Spielberg's representation of the gas chambers saying that 'I deeply believe that there are things which cannot and should not be represented.' I was quite critical of The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas in my thesis because of the inaccuracies in the text but now feel that I was perhaps a bit unfair as the text has stayed with me in a way that few do. But I was concerned about lots of things. There isn't space here to mention all of them but just to take one seemingly small thing: there is a mention of mud towards the end of The Boy with the Striped Pyjamas when Bruno takes off his shoes: 'At first it felt horrible putting his bare feet into so much mud; they sank down to his ankles and every time he lifted a foot it felt worse. But then he started to rather enjoy it (p. 204).' Many survivor accounts I read mention the mud at Auschwitz, one woman, an Italian Jew called Piera Sonnino[2], said of it:
It didn’t seem like earth and water: but something organic that had decomposed, putrefied flesh that had turned liquid. And at the same time, it had a presence of its own. As if death had given birth to monstrous, vermin-like form of life, treacherous and perfidious, which grabbed us by the ankles and kept us from moving quickly as we had been ordered.
I felt that Boyne's bland description was insulting to the perceptions of those who had been there. As you say, a sanitised account.
The research I did for the PhD novel was extremely helpful for The Search and gave me the broad background but in addition I read historical accounts which gave me details about Aryanisation programmes and the Lebensborn project. They gave me the details of how children were selected for these: the medical and psychological tests used (the latter of great interest to me as I work as a psychologist). I read about resistance groups in the occupied countries and how children were used in these. There's not a great deal written about Lidice but I read everything I could about it. I also visited the memorial site at Lidice which has photographic and film evidence of the destruction. Most movingly, it has interviews with some of the children (now in old age) who were sent to German families and the effect this had on them. Some talk about how they have no memory of being taken from their birth mothers but do have vivid memories of being brought back to Czechoslovakia and the wrench they felt leaving the people they had come to think of as their parents. They had lost the knowledge of Czech which they'd had and one man talked about how he felt he never caught up at school because of it. There were differences between siblings, between those who were old enough to have some memory of Lidice and those who were too young to remember it. I was pretty immersed in that time period while I wrote the book.
You must have considered at some point including a third plot thread talking about the trials of Jan's mother and sister. Why did you choose to reject it? I have to say towards the end I half-expected the book to end on a cliff-hanger and wondered if a sequel was coming.
Although I didn't consider a third plot thread about Jan's mother (in my mind, Maria is dead) The Search is based on the true story of the village of Lidice and no one knows for sure what happened to the children who weren't selected for Aryanisation but most agree they were likely to have been gassed at Chelmno), I have wondered about a sequel. This would be a novel from Jan's mother's point of view which follows her to Ravensbruck and then to the reunion with Jan and Lena and what happens to them then. I also wanted to write more about Pawel and his experience. I haven't ruled either of these possibilities out for the future.
Anne Frank's diary's narrative is, of course, in the first person. Although I agree that your choice of the present tense has its pluses I think I lot could have been gained by using a first person narrative to help us really get inside Jan's head. How do you feel about that?
This is a really interesting question. I didn't at any point consider using the first person voice for Jan and so I have to think retrospectively about this. It's pretty unusual for me not to consider all the options; my computer is full of various versions of things I've written with changes to tense, point of view etc. The novel I wrote for my PhD for example, went through seven or eight serious drafts (by that I mean substantial changes to structure, not just editing). In The Search I used the present tense to try to gain a sense of immediacy and I hope I've been successful in this. I also wanted to keep a certain distance emotionally. This is quite hard to explain. While researching for the PhD, I read a large number of accounts about the Holocaust. These included fictional and biographical accounts as well as historical ones. The Holocaust is obviously a highly emotive topic and there were books I read that had me sobbing for hours. That said though, it is the more measured ones, the ones that report calmly what happened, that have stayed with me. I'm thinking of works like Anne Frank's diary, Primo Levi's If This Is a Man and Charlotte Delbo's On Auschwitz. I think that at a subconscious level, I was afraid that if I wrote in the first person that I would become over emotional, perhaps even lapse into sentiment and I really wanted to avoid that. Maybe I didn't trust myself as a writer.
I'm always concerned when it comes to marketing a book that the cover attracts a certain demographic. I'm not sure for example that I would have picked up this book based solely on the cover. That said, I actually think this is a novel that a lot of young adults would appreciate because it's not too graphic although it is honest. Do you agree?
I like the cover! The Search was published first in Spain (as La Cancion de Jan) and then in Holland (as Zoeken Naar Lena). When Alma picked it up in the UK, they suggested staying with the Spanish cover and I was happy to go with that. I wouldn't have been too happy if they'd chosen the Dutch cover - I'm not at all sure about that one. I suppose my only quibble with this cover is that the boy seems to me to be rather small for a ten year old. I know exactly what you mean about book cover design though - my particular hate are those books for women which have a photograph of a headless young woman on them, often upside down, doing a handstand or a cartwheel or something. What on earth are the publishers trying to say? And as for lime green and neon pink covers with that curly font in relief...
I agree that the novel might appeal to young adults and this has been suggested to me by friends and colleagues who have read it. I hope that its honesty will appeal to a wide audience though.
AFTERTHOUGHT
Having carefully read through these answers I have to say that I have come to look at this book a little differently. That said I've not edited what I wrote before because that was my initial reaction and I can't change that. So what would I have done differently, maybe added in pages and pages of existential angst? I don't know.
Certainly my respect for historical fiction writers is growing.
***
Maureen Myant is a senior educational psychologist based in Glasgow. In 2004 she was awarded a New Writers’ Bursary by the Scottish Arts Council and she has completed her MLit in Creative Writing from the University of Glasgow. She is married with three grown-up children.
The Search is her first novel to appear in print however her short story 'Tea in Tashkent', one of a series of linked short stories set in the USSR appear in the print anthology Knuckle End: An Anthology of Emerging Scottish Literary Talent. You can read 'A Parting Gift', another story from the collection, here. At the moment she is working on a novel about a trip to the USSR in the late seventies by a British tour group.
The Search is published in the UK by Alma Books and retails at £12.99 which sounds like a lot but it is printed on good paper and it feels like a substantial volume in your hand.
REFERENCES
[1] Last year a comprehensive BBC poll found that only 55 percent of Britons (and just 40 percent of those aged 18 - 35) had heard of Auschwitz, the death camp where one fifth of the 6 million Jews killed in the Holocaust were murdered.
A new BBC poll reveals that 94 percent of respondents now say they have heard of Auschwitz, including 86 percent of those under 35.
This change is likely caused by:
(a) The comprehensive and generally accurate media coverage of the commemorations surrounding the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz on January 27.
(b) The widespread media coverage of the scandal around Prince Harry wearing Nazi regalia at a costume party.
(c) The BBC itself must take some credit after it broadcast in late January of its program "Auschwitz: The Nazis and the Final Solution," parts of which were watched by more than one-third of the UK population.
- Tom Gross, "Holocaust Memorial Day raises awareness among Britons" (AFP / Yahoo news, March 17, 2005)
[2] Piera Sonnino was deported to Auschwitz in 1944. She was later transferred to Bergen Belsen and Braunschweig. The sole survivor of a family of eight, she returned to Italy in 1950. She died in 1999.
14 comments:
I resonate with any book that takes up issues related to WW2. This one is no exception.
My father fought in the Second World War. He was the youngest captain in the Dutch army. For weeks on end in the early 1940s he hid between the ceiling and the roof of his in laws’ house to escape being sent off to a Nazi work camp.
My father lost his first daughter on 27 February during the Honger Winter of 1945 when she was five months old. She died of suspected meningitis, made worse by malnutrition. This daughter bore the same name as my older sister, the one my father subsequently abused. It is perhaps no coincidence that my father died thirty-seven years later on the same day on which his first daughter had died, 27 February.
My father never spoke openly about his war experience. When the introductory music to the television serial Combat crashed onto the screen, he changed channels. Like so many traumatised by war my father kept it to himself.
My father was not directly part of the Holocaust exoerience except in so far as he fought alongside it.
I don't think we can ever undersetimate he impact of WW2 or of any war, anywhere, especially on the children and on those who survive.
Thanks for reviewing this book and for interviweing the author.
She writes well and is interested in the emotional truth of the story. What more could we ask?
My father fought in the war too, Elisabeth, although he was never captured. He was in the Royal Navy. He talked about it but as it put it he was usually miles away from any actual killing so it was fairly easy for him to be detached about the whole thing. It might have been different if he's actually had to shoot someone at point blank range. We sat and watched The World at War every Sunday without any problem.
We did have a friend who had been captured by the Japanese who never spoke about the war. At least not to me. I suppose as a contemporary my dad had managed to glean a few things but even there it wasn't a subject he'd open up on.
As regards the Holocaust I did find a newspaper clipping in my dad's things once showing naked people queuing up and I wondered why my dad was hanging onto a rude picture like that but that was it. I never asked him and he never mentioned it himself.
I'm glad you liked the review. I was concerned that it was a bit flat. It bothered me that I didn't connect with the plight of the young boy more. I'm sure more sensitive souls will find the thing a real page-turner if not an actual tear-jerker.
Jim - I had avoided reading this post because of a particular image I will never be able to get out of my head from Elie Wiesel's "Night." I found your book review very interesting and if it is flat - thank you. I could bear it, although I am still in angst over certain unresolved aspects of the story. My father also fought in WWII. There is a very long account of his of Buchenwald trip here: http://kasscho.blogspot.com/2009/08/buchenwald-recon-trip.html
- don't expect you to read it, but the pictures (no Buchenwald ones) are interesting.
To be honest, Kass, as WW2 books go this is pretty tame. I even suggest in the review that it would be suitable for a young adult audience. There are no scenes in a concentration camp although cattle trucks do appear briefly. I'm not sure myself if I would want to read about what went on in the camps; I've already learned more than enough. I scanned your blog and when I saw the bit about the tattoos that was enough for me.
Dear Jim, great accounts and reflections.
Would you include anything also about that marvellous novel whose author died in a death camp: "Suite Francaise"?
The atmosphere she has created of those times (1940-41) just before the Holocaust is tremendous.
I'd not heard of it Tommaso but the Wikipedia article on the book looks quite comprehensive.
The web's synchronicity is still active, then: I'm about to post a review of a book dealing with a Czech house and family and W.W.II.
I've never really subscribed to the view that if you weren't there you shouldn't write about it. The important distinction is whether you have something valid to say. No, you couldn't enjoy a book like this, but I think I may be compelled to read it. Thanks for the review.
I actually watched film film 'The Boy in the striped P.J.'s' in Italy. It was quite humdrum. I din't want blood and guts and death but the film just seemed to politically correct and tame, like it was designed primarily to show primary kids or in history class, not to shocking, but enoug hto bring a tear to some tender eyes.
I've read a few books on WW2, used to be my pet topic. 'The Nazi Officer's Wife' - interesting biography about Edith Hahn, a Jewsih woman who went underground and pretended to be Germany and ended up marrying a Nazi Officer. When she confessed what she had done, he didn't say and thing, and they stayed together. Interesting book. I actually own a copy of Mein Kampf, it's mince, a pure nightmare to read, I have a hard to believing such a book could really have inspired a nation. It seems willfully bad.
'Lest we forgot' - I think we've forgotten, Jim, we're still fighting away 'rednering hell ratonale' (as e.e. cummings once put it.) I think we have forgotten, not the dead, but the fact the war is still going on. Have we not learned anything? I think not.
If we took that line of thought, Dave then eventually much that we value would be lost. There are levels of experience. The first level is to experience something yourself; the second, to have witnessed it yourself ; the third, to talk to someone who experienced or witnessed it; the fourth, the read an account by someone who experienced or witnessed it, and the fifth, the read a book by someone who has studied it.
I'm sure you could make a lot more levels if you give it more thought but the thing is, take for example the Great War, there is now no one in the UK left to talk to and so a whole level of understanding, level 2, is now beyond our grasp and soon the third level will go and all we will be left with are levels 4 and below. Bit by bit the books in print will vanish and all we will have are new books down at level 5 to keep the thing alive.
The 'Ode of Remembrance' contains "Lest we forget" as its final line. Forgetting is inevitable though. At the moment many of us can remember individuals who fought in that war. Soon though they will be only names that we remember. We will never have sat on their laps or played football in the back garden with them. Eventually the majority will reduced to a name carved into a block of stone. What they did will be remembered but, for all intents and purposes, they will not.
No one in The Search, is real. Jan did not exist. It doesn't matter that he never existed. The book is about what happened. It didn't happen to Jan but it happened to someone.
I've not read much about the war McGuire; the tele has been my main source of information, that and talking to by dad. Now, of course, he's gone and I realise I probably didn't ask any of the right questions or listened properly to what he did tell me. Then again, he spent his war on ships and, although he did see action, action was a long way away from him.
I've not read or seen The Boy in Striped Pyjamas but having read about it I'm not sure that I want to. Granted it was written for kids and so one would expect it to be sanitised. They don't need all the details; they simply need to know enough. The time will come when they'll be ready to hear the awful truth.
Great parable "Ugly Truths" dear Jim in Ink Sweat and Tears. I'll tell my students to read it.
All my best, Davide
(Tommaso)
I personally find the "tame" accounts quite shocking. I think it is a sad indication of how desensitised our society has become that we seek more and more graphic recounts of past events, when, these "tame" aspects were actually horrific. "The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas", for eg, was not "tame": what is tame about the death of a child? Perhaps it was not true to every conceivable perspective of holocaust experience, perhaps it was sanitised but the small element it did show was absolutely shocking. And what does make a good depiction?
I don't think we all need to have experienced something in order to write about it. But maybe we all need to actually engage with what has already been written about it in a way which means that those who did experience it didn't do so in vain.
I believe that stories such as these, told in compelling narratives have an opposite effect to desensitizing--a resentisizing if you will. Why? Because we grow numb to the bombardment of horror after horror, the mind and spirit shut down. But if a story is told in an accessible way, then we comprehend and empathize.
Interesting review and intriguing novel, Jim.
I can't believe The World At War is that old. Or perhaps I never saw it until some years later. Either way, it was awfully captivating. Anyway, I enjoyed this post, Jim.
Thanks for letting me know, Tommaso. I'll write a wee post about it if I find the time. You know, it's taken me two years to get that published. Puzzles the hell out of me what some editors are looking for. I think it's a charming wee piece if I have to say so myself.
You're quite right, Rachel, we have become more desensitised but I think it's perhaps a little more than that, people don't use their imaginations as much as they used to. I watched a film last night which much to my surprise and disappointment featured a serial killer and a chainsaw in what apart from that was quite a decent movie. Now the inclusion of a serial killer would not necessarily put me off watching something – my wife and I watch Criminal Minds on a regular basis – but I didn’t need to see fingers flying off all over the place to get the idea. It's like the Alien franchise. I've seen all of the films and the amount of 'in your face' horror has increased picture by picture and the quality has gone down in direct proportion to that.
Why, I'm sure, The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas was "horrific" to you is that you invested some of yourself in it which perhaps others were unwilling or unable to do. There is a problem with many products these days that feel they have to sensationalise horror, to ramp it up a bit. That was the whole basis behind the last Alien vs Predator film – "See, see, we've got an R rating this time. So what, Alien had an 18 rating when it was released here.
You make an interesting point, Conda. I suppose it's like someone who has listened to nothing but rock music with the volume turned up to 11 and then is faced with Holst's 'Mars: the Bringer of War' from The Planets which a music teacher once described to me as the most frightening piece of music ever written. I don't think it is but it did get me to, to use Rachel's word, "engage" with it. I had to try and put myself in the place of people hearing that at a time of war. Holst started to sketch 'Mars' just as the First World War began and it was used in BBC radio broadcasts.
There's nothing graphic in The Search because little happens that could be exploited. It's much like One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich, I'm sure there were plenty of things that could have been included to spice the book up a bit but were they needed? In that respect, although eminently filmable, I have to wonder if filming this book would reduce it to mere entertainment which is certainly what the last production of The Diary of Anne Frank I saw felt like to me.
All of this is very interesting. I'll have to give it some more thought.
And, finally, John, oh how those years slip by. Yes, I checked the date and it has been a while. It's been a while since its last repeat too; I caught a couple of episodes then. No doubt The History Channel has its hands on it by now.
The one series I'd like to see which I'd like to see again was All Our Yesterdays, another programme we used to sit and watch as a family. Maybe it's the family thing I miss more than the actual programmes.
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