Mortimer, Roger

  • Vintage Roger: Letters from the POW Years

    £16.99

    In 1930, 21-year-old Roger Mortimer was commissioned into the 3rd Battalion Coldstream Guards, and would spend the next 8 years stationed at Chelsea Barracks. He lived a fairly leisurely existence, with his parents’ house in Cadogan Gardens a stone’s throw away, and pleasant afternoons were whiled away at the racecourse or a members’ club. Things got a little hairy in Palestine in 1938, when Roger, now a captain, found himself amidst the action in the Arab Uprising. While fighting the Germans in 1940, Roger was knocked unconscious by a shell explosion. Upon waking he found that he was now a PoW. Thus began a period of incarceration that would last 5 long years, and which for Roger there seemed no conceivable end in sight. This account tells of Roger’s years in the Coldstream Guards and is followed by a collection of letters he wrote to his good friend Peggy Dunne from May 1940 to late 1944.

  • Dear Lumpy

    £7.99

    ‘Dearest Lumpy, I hope you are plump and well. Your mother bashed her car yesterday and chooses to believe it was not her fault.’ Roger Mortimer’s witty dressing-downs and affectionate advice were not only directed at his wayward son, Lupin. Though better behaved than her mischievous older brother, Louise (aka ‘Lumpy’) still caused her father to reach for his typewriter. With the same unique charm and often snort-inducing humour that made ‘Dear Lupin’ a bestseller, Roger Mortimer’s letters guide and support his daughter through every scrape she found herself in.

  • My Dearest Jane

    £14.99

    Following on from the hugely popular ‘Dear Lupin’, Charlie Mortimer’s older sister, Jane Torday, shares her own letters. As Roger Mortimer’s eldest daughter, she received hundreds over the years, containing the same wit, irreverence and poignancy as those to Charlie.