If Hitler Comes by Douglas Brown and Christopher Serpella query by L J Hurst |
| A few weeks ago I bought a second-hand copy of a paperback first published in March 1941 - IF HITLER COMES by Douglas Brown and Christopher Serpell. It had been published in hardback a year before under the title LOSS OF EDEN. None of the reference books I've checked mention the book or its authors, yet it obviously influenced other writers - and apparantly was widely reviewed at the time - the cover flap quotes three reviews from The Daily Mail, Education and The New Statesman. IF HITLER COMES describes the early years of the war. After a phoney war period there is peace. A government weaker than Chamberlain's takes power, while fascist agitators provide the breakdown of society that gives the Germans an excuse to send a peace-keeping force. Opposition is demoralised and quickly collapses. The fascist leader, an Irishman, realises that he has been used and turns to resistance but socialist opposition ends with a single shooting accident, the Labour Party does nothing. The narrator of the story, a New Zealand journalist, escapes home before the ultimate bloodbath to write his true account, for his journalism was false, censored and manipulated by English and Nazi alike. The manuscript is supposed to have been discoved and published by Maori archaeologists of the far future. Even though the book only appeared after the outbreak of war it is very much a warning of the dangers of pessimism, collaboration and the hope of cohabitation with the Nazis. The abuse of parliamentary democracy- the failure of the Opposition to oppose - is a strong element. Some real people appear in the book, but fortunately they acted in reality in a better way than Brown and Serpell thought they might. In his essay "Worlds Without End Foisted Upon the Future - Some Antecedents of Nineteen Eighty-Four" (in Christopher Norris, ed. INSIDE THE MYTH Orwell: Views From The Left), Andy Croft describes many of the anti-fascist, anti-totalitarian novels of the 1930s (without mentioning IF HITLER COMES) but he concludes "There is no evidence that Orwell ever read ... any of the anti-fascist novels mentioned above". I wonder, though, did Orwell have a hand in writing IF HITLER COMES. Compare a passage from the book with another published eight years later: '"I shall never forget the frantic plea of a Reader in CLassics at London University, on being told that he would be held in "protective custody" there. "Stoke Poges!" he screamed. "No, no, not Stoke Poges! Anywhere but Stoke Poges! Please don't send me to Stoke Poges."' (IF HITLER COMES chapter seven "Terror") '"I've got a wife and three children. The biggest of them isn't six years old. You can take the whole lot f them and cut their throats in front of my eyes, and I'll stand by and watch it. But not room 101." '"Room 101," said the officer.' (NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR Part three chapter one) Ideas from Orwell's other writings also appear -
As late as 1943 when Orwell reviewed some pamphlets he wrote
of one, I ,JAMES
BLUNT that it was a "good flesh creeper, founded on the justified
assumption that the
mass of the English people haven't yet heard of Fascism". IF HITLER
COMES is in
parts a flesh creeper but manages to be serious as well. Did Orwell
know Serpell or
Brown, or are the similarities only coincidence? More information would
be gratefully
received. |
Note (1997):I sent this account to Andy Sawyer, then editor of PAPERBACK
INFERNO,
and he forwarded it to David V. Barrett, who published it in VECTOR:THE
CRITICAL
JOURNAL OF THE BRITISH SCIENCE FICTION ASSOCIATION, under the title
"Not
Stoke Poges". Barrett pointed out that the book is listed in I.F.
Clarke's VOICES
PROPHECYING WAR. John Brunner in a letter suggested "Not Stoke Poges"
was a
phrase in everyday use. |
© L J Hurst 2007