Join us on The Explaining History Podcast as we welcome Dame Vikki Heywood, former Executive Director of the Royal Shakespeare Company and the Royal Court Theatre, to discuss her dazzling debut novel Miss Veal and Miss Ham. Set against the sleepy veneer of a 1951 Buckinghamshire village post office, this intimate tale reveals the hidden passions and unspoken resilience of two women whose lives span from the suffragette movement to the aftermath of World War II.
In this episode, we explore:
- A Day of Reckoning: How one pivotal day in 1951 cracks open Miss Dora Ham and Miss Beatrix Veal’s carefully maintained spinster façade—and what it tells us about post-war Britain.
- Through Beatrix’s Eyes: The wry, poignant narrative voice that illuminates the challenges of love that “cannot be spoken,” and the heart-breaking decisions forced by changing times.
- Echoes of Literary Greats: Why fans of Barbara Pym and Sarah Waters will be drawn to Heywood’s rich tapestry of gay underground clubs, wartime Blitz life, and the shifting landscape of women’s work after the war.
- Hidden Lives, Lasting Love: What inspired Heywood to tell a four-decade story of clandestine romance, and how her own career in the arts informed this deeply human portrait.
Whether you’re intrigued by post-war social history, the evolution of LGBTQ+ narratives,

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