During the Blitz, Henry Green served on the London Auxiliary Fire
Service, and this experience lies behind Caught, published when the
bombing had only recently ended. Like Green, Richard Roe, the hero of
this resolutely unheroic book, comes from the upper class. His wife
remains at their country estate, far from the threatened city, while Roe
serves under Pye, a professional fireman whose deranged sister once
kidnapped Roe's young son, a bad memory that complicates the
relationship between these two very different men. The book opens as the
various members of the brigade are having practice runs and fighting
boredom and sleeping around in the months before the attack from the
air. It ends with Roe, who has been injured in the bombing, back in the
country, describing and trying to come to terms with the apocalyptic
conflagration in which he and his fellows were caught, putting into
question the very notion of ordinary life.
Caught was censored at the insistence of its publisher, Leonard Woolf,
when it came out in 1943. This is the first American edition of the book
to appear as Green intended.