I had heard about this book in various places, but it is out of print. I finally found a second hand copy at Awesome Books.
Here’s the blurb …
Business As Usual by Jane Oliver and Ann Stafford was first published in 1933. It’s a delightful illustrated novel in letters from Hilary Fane, an Edinburgh girl fresh out of university who is determined to support herself by her own earnings in London for a year, despite the mutterings of her surgeon fiance . After a nervous beginning looking for a job while her savings rapidly diminish, she finds work as a typist in the London department store of Everyman’s (a very thin disguise for Selfridges), and rises rapidly through the ranks to work in the library, where she has to enforce modernising systems on her entrenched and frosty colleagues. Business as Usual is charming: intelligent, heart-warming, funny, and entertaining. It’s deeply interesting as a record of the history of shopping in the 1930s, and also fascinating for its unflinching descriptions of social conditions, poverty and illegitimacy.
I love this book! A series of letters and memos (meemos) that Hilary writes to various people (and the ocassional letter about her). It is witty and interesting. Given that it was published in 1933 and set in 1931 and 1932, I have to think the working and living conditions are accurate. There were so many staff employed in the department store – originally Hilary was writing postage labels for the books! Now days you’re lucky to find any staff in department stores.









