Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 152, April 4, 1917 by Various

(6 User reviews)   899
By Elijah Schneider Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Leadership
Various Various
English
Hey, I just spent an afternoon with a 1917 time capsule, and you have to hear about it. This isn't a novel—it's a complete issue of 'Punch,' the legendary British humor magazine, published right in the thick of World War I. The weirdest thing? It's not all grim war talk. Sure, there are cartoons about submarines and poems about rationing, but you also get jokes about golf, fashion sketches, and silly puns about vegetables. The main 'conflict' here is the human spirit itself, trying to find a laugh while the world is falling apart. It's like listening in on a national conversation where people are desperately clinging to normalcy with wit as their lifeline. Reading it feels intimate and strange, like you've found your great-grandfather's diary and half of it is doodles. If you've ever wondered how people really lived through history's darkest hours, this is your backstage pass.
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This book is simply a facsimile of a single weekly issue of Punch magazine from April 1917. There's no single plot. Instead, you're flipping through 24 pages of what made Britons chuckle (or groan) over a century ago. You'll find political cartoons where the Kaiser gets his comeuppance, short humorous essays poking fun at wartime bureaucracy, and verses that find light in the blackout. But sandwiched between the war content are the everyday amusements: comic drawings of hapless tourists, observations on the changing role of women, and ads for things like 'Kruschen Salts' for health.

The Story

There is no traditional story. The 'narrative' is the issue itself, a slice of life from the home front in the third year of a devastating war. One page might feature a solemn poem about a son at the front, and the very next is a cartoon about a man struggling with his new, shorter 'war economy' haircut. This jarring contrast is

Why You Should Read It

This is history without the filter of a textbook. It's raw, unprocessed, and surprisingly relatable. You get a direct sense of the mood—the resilience, the anxiety, and the stubborn refusal to surrender joy. The humor can be poignant, like a cartoon of children playing 'U-boats' in a washtub, or wonderfully trivial, like a debate on the proper way to eat porridge. Reading it, you realize that even in a global crisis, people still worried about bad train service and annoying neighbors. It makes that monumental era feel human-sized.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history buffs who are tired of dry facts and want to feel the texture of daily life in the past. It's also a gem for anyone interested in media, satire, or social history. Don't go in expecting a page-turning thriller; go in as an observer. Pour a cup of tea, settle in, and browse. You won't get a plot, but you'll get something rarer: a genuine, unvarnished connection to the voices—both silly and serious—of a world at war.

Andrew Williams
9 months ago

This is one of those stories where the flow of the text seems very fluid. Truly inspiring.

Donna Martin
8 months ago

Loved it.

Christopher Torres
2 years ago

As someone who reads a lot, the narrative structure is incredibly compelling. I couldn't put it down.

William Allen
1 year ago

I have to admit, it provides a comprehensive overview perfect for everyone. Thanks for sharing this review.

David Scott
11 months ago

Great read!

4
4 out of 5 (6 User reviews )

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