61 A Town Like Alice Nevil Shute
This was a book club choice. Published in 1950 when memories from the war were not distant and attitudes were set very much in what is now a bygone era.
Jean Paget is a young English woman working in Malaya when the war breaks out and she along with other fellow female compatriots and children are captured by the Japanese separated from the men they find themselves marched around great swathes of that country to a supposed women's camp they never actually reach because it didn't exist, all the time being told "it's not very far". Many of the party fall sick and die along the way, among the survival of the fittest, Jean is to emerge as a leader. En route they are to encounter male Australian POW among their number, is one Joe Harmon who puts his life on the line to steal some food for her hungry party and is to pay a heavy price for that. Between the two, although their meetings are brief there is a frisson of attraction, although Joe assumes Jean is married, as most of the women were and she is forever to appear with a baby on her hip, his mother having died along the way. Their meetings are all too brief before Joe is tortured horribly for his transgressions, Jean is to hear he subsequently died from his injuries. Post war Jean is repatriated to England her wartime experiences are deeply buried within her stoic character whilst she moves on with her life as a typist for a company that produces shoes and handbags. To her surprise she is to find she has been left a legacy by a distant uncle as the only surviving member of her family. Her, solicitor , Noel Strachan an older man who takes a paternal interest in her and provides the link between the life she has lived and her life going forward. Realising she has quite a lot of money at her disposal, her wish is to return to Malaya and build a well for the women in the village that sustained her and her fellow captives during part of the war years. She is also to learn by chance when she is there, that the man who made such an impression on her, actually survived his ordeal at the hands of the Japanese. From Malaya she furthers her travels to Australia to find him, whilst he, simultaneously has arrived in London to find her, also having discovered that he was mistaken in assuming she was married. It is to her solicitor he is led in her pursuit. Noel then provides the all important bridge between the two would-be lovers. Jean awaiting Joe's return to Australia arrives in Willstown a somewhat one eyed hole in the depths of the outback where Joe is a cattleman/rancher. When they do eventually meet up and realise their dreams of marriage it becomes apparent to Jean that Joe would probably have problems adapting to another life and its into that setting that Jean with the aid of her inheritance is to develop into something of an entrepreneur in setting up a business producing shoes and handbags from crocodile skins employing local young women who would otherwise have to decamp to Cairns to find employment. Her products are exported to London drawing on the knowledge and know-how of her previous company with one of her former colleagues with oodles of expertise travelling out to oversee the venture. In time she has a multitude of burgeoning cottage industries, ice cream parlour/beauty salon/grocery stores etc. turning the one eyed hole in the back of beyond, Willstown into "A town like Alice" which at first sight by her and as commented by Joe is "a bonza town" which has it all.
I enjoyed the story, more in the first part really, I think I found some of the casual racist and disrespectful referencing of the aboriginal people pulled me up short, insomuch as some of the pejorative slang names were pretty shocking, well that was 1950, nevertheless, it did take the shine off the narrative somewhat.
However a good read, it wouldn't go down in my heart as one of my very best but it was told through the eyes of a writer who had experienced some of the pivotal moments of the world at war.