Third title in the new Honno Voices - bringing the past to life - a bestselling series of biography, memoir and autobiography titles. Now in standard B-format paperback with an updated introduction and notes."Mornings were used to teach the basic three Rs and to progress us through our Janet and John readers. I only learned much later, in my thirties, how limited Janets activities had been in comparison to her brother Johns and how some scholars linked these textual role models to teenage girls poverty of aspiration."Brenda moved to London and learned nursing in the traditional way, all hospital corners and nurses never run. Heulwen determined to establish Welsh language schools and didnt stay at home with her own children. Let down by her married lover, Dot was treated appallingly by the dragons of the Moral Welfare department.Like many other aspects of life, education in the 50s and 60s for most girls still meant segregation not just by gender but also by eleven-plus. Grammar school set you up for life, whilst secondary modern meant you were one of the workers. Many women still lost their jobs on marriage and certainly if they became unmarried mothers. But the 50s and 60s also brought rock-n-roll, rising hemlines and the first signs of female emancipation since the vote. With the pill came freedom from the threat of unwanted pregnancy. And though the swinging sixties passed most of rural Wales by, they did bring electricity and the Dansette and the music of the Beatles ...