Jaffareadstoo is delighted be part of the Another You Blog Tour
And to welcome back to the blog the author Jane Cable
Today , Jane is explaining to us the connection between her latest novel, Another You and World War II...
Like most novels Another You had
many iterations before the final story fell into place. The first version was
based on a real ghost story from Studland in Dorset where the book is set, but
as I began to research the history of the area I realised there was actually
something far more interesting going on.
On my first visit to Studland in
2009 a friend had taken me to Fort Henry, a huge concrete blockhouse
overlooking the beach, and explained it had been built for D-Day rehearsals
witnessed by the very top brass including Churchill and King George VI. What I
didn’t realise at the time was the extent of those rehearsals, and the tragic fact
that six men died during the first of them.
This was, in fact, kept secret
for a very long while. I stumbled across the story when googling Studland in
World War II led me to a naval history message board. On it was a thread about
the rehearsals including a heartfelt plea for information from the son of one
of the men who died. It was answered by tank restorer and WWII historian, John
Pearson, and I got in touch with him.
John was generous with his time
and his knowledge. His starting point had been the restoration of his Valentine
Double Duplex tank which had been used in the first of the Studland D-Day
rehearsals, code named Exercise Smash. Double Duplex meant that the tank was
made seaworthy (or not, as the case may be) by the addition of a canvas skirt
held up by hydraulics so it could power ashore from landing craft and be in
action on the beaches straight away.
At Studland things did not go
according to plan. Normally the most peaceful of bays, on the morning of the
exercise the wind turned and came in from the east making the sea unusually
choppy. The tanks were launched three miles out and seven of them did not make
it to shore with the lives of six soldiers from the 4/7 Dragoon Guards being
lost. Lessons were learnt by the British at least and on D-Day the tanks were
launched much closer to the beaches. At Omaha, however, the Americans launched
from 5,000 yards and only three of their tanks made it which had a massive
effect on the loss of life there.
On the sixtieth anniversary of
D-Day, helped by the National Trust and various arms of the military, John
Pearson organised a permanent memorial to the men who died in Smash which was
unveiled by one of their widows. He also brought his newly restored Valentine
DD to Studland to put it through its paces. Ten years later it was back there
again and I was lucky enough to meet John and to attend a moving memorial
service at Fort Henry.
By then I knew that wartime
memories would be central to my story. One of the few surviving veterans was
there that day and so I created the character of George, a former soldier with
a proud but cynical view of the war effort, who provides my heroine Marie with
a direct link to the past. After The Cheesemaker’s House I had really wanted to
write in a time where this was possible, where there was a character who could
ground the smoke and mirrors in historical truth.
Even when I was close to
finishing the book I felt there were huge gaps in my knowledge about everyday
life in wartime Studland. I had joined the Facebook group of the local
historical society and they put me in touch with National Trust warden Stewart
Rainbird who had pulled together an oral history of the time by talking to
locals who had lived through it. His knowledge enabled me to bring the whole
period to life in more subtle ways, such as the constant noise of the shelling
which went on for weeks – but stopped at weekends so that the ranges could be
cleared.
Although Another You is set in
2004, what happened sixty years before is the vital beating heart of the story
and the catalyst for change in Marie’s life. As a tribute to the men who died
and in order to help survivors of combat I will be donating £1 to Words for the
Wounded for every review on Amazon in the UK and in the US.
Marie Johnson is trapped by her
job as a chef in a Dorset pub and by her increasingly poisonous marriage to its
landlord. Worn down by his string of affairs she has no self-confidence, no
self-respect and the only thing that keeps her going is watching her son turn
into a talented artist.
But the sixtieth anniversary of a
D-Day exercise which ended in disaster triggers chance meetings which prove
unlikely catalysts for change as Marie discovers that sometimes the hardest
person to save is yourself.
Follow on Twitter @JaneCable
Huge thanks to Jane for this fascinating guest post and for the invitation to be part of her Blog Tour.
Another You is published by Endeavour Press
Another You is published by Endeavour Press
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