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The Marriage Bureau

The True Story of How Two Matchmakers Arranged Love in Wartime London

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A riveting glimpse of life and love during and after World War II—a heart-warming, touching, and thoroughly absorbing true story of a world gone by.

In the spring of 1939, with the Second World War looming, two determined twenty-four-year-olds, Heather Jenner and Mary Oliver, decided to open a marriage bureau. They found a tiny office on London’s Bond Street and set about the delicate business of matchmaking. Drawing on the bureau’s extensive archives, Penrose Halson—who many years later found herself the proprietor of the bureau—tells their story, and those of their clients.

From shop girls to debutantes; widowers to war veterans, clients came in search of security, social acceptance, or simply love. And thanks to the meticulous organization and astute intuition of the Bureau’s matchmakers, most found what they were looking for.

Penrose Halson draws from newspaper and magazine articles, advertisements, and interviews with the proprietors themselves to bring the romance and heartbreak of matchmaking during wartime to vivid, often hilarious, life in this unforgettable story of a most unusual business.

“A book full of charm and hilarity.”—Country Life

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    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2017

      Debut author Halson presents a highly readable story of a matchmaking bureau on London's Bond Street created by two pioneering women in the months before World War II. In 1992, Halson took over this historic business, operating it until 2000. Here she utilizes the bureau's extensive archives of letters, advertisements, newspaper accounts, registration forms, and photographs to open a window into the lives of men and women, rich and poor, between 1939 and 1949. From a historical standpoint, this book is valuable for what it reveals about how the gloom of wartime society. Men were eager to marry before they were sent to the front while women, remembering the gender imbalances of the years after the Great War, were anxious to secure a husband. The class consciousness of the age is also apparent, as each client was assigned a "category" and socially typecast by the astute matchmakers, who came to be seen as reliable observers of social life and mores. The appendix offers a detailed listing of what clients were seeking in a spouse, which should interest historians. VERDICT A breezy social history for readers interested in tales of a bygone age.--Marie M. Mullaney, Caldwell Coll., NJ

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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