There are a lot of things that are interesting about reading unabridged #ChaletSchool books, the first of which is 98 years old this year. The last is 53 years old.

Some are High Critical Yikes: huge amounts of smoking, racist language of the period casually tossed around.

Then there’s the progressive-for-the-time views of feminity which are also now extremely dated.

But there’s also some really interesting insights in to the past.

I just learned about a product called “Thermogene” which my e-reader dictionary didn’t recognise as a word, which is understandable because it seems it was a product for a wadding /wrap one could cover in medicated rubs.

https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/30025791

It must have been very common to be used casually in a paragraph as if everyone in the 1920s would recognise it and what it was.

Thermogene Medicated Wadding

Opened box of Thermogene Medicated Wadding containing some pink-coloured wadding wrapped in paper. The box is predominantly red with 'Thermogene' in large letters across front and back in an elipse with other inscriptions relating to manufacturer, export and use.

Imperial War Museums
It’s also enormously interesting from a social attitudes perspective in some cases, especially in the books between and including The Chalet School in Exile (published 1940) and Jo to the Rescue (1945). In some ways the #ChaletSchool series is one of the best placed for this.
That’s because the Chalet School was originally based in the Austrian Tyrol. They have an international school which includes French, British, German, Austrian, Italian pupils. The attitude expressed within the war books is anti-Nazi but not anti German.
The anti-jewish nature of the Nazi regime is hilighted (Jo has to escape the nazis because she attempted to save a jewish jeweller from nazis), the lethality of even early concentration camps is also hilighted (a minor male Christian character dies in one)

Again, these were written contemporaneously with the war, sometimes to the clear detriment of the story. Want to know how unforeseen the invasion of the Channel Islands was? Exile (1940, presumably sent to press or published before April that year) had the #ChaletSchool relocate from Austria to Guernsey bc of Anschluss.

Goes To It (1941) had to start the book by relocating from Guernsey during the fall of France to “Armishire” (Herefordshire).

Also shows a possibly surprising amount of toleration of various denominations within Christianity in that Catholicism and CofE are shown to be equally respected and have around a 50:50 split in the pupils. One of the main characters converts from Anglican to Catholic part way thru the series - as did the author herself.
Ok, I promise there was a point to this before I got super in to telling you all about this book series I love. I will get to it in the next toot.

Anyway, the point is this: it is a series that spans about 50 years, from well before vaccines existed for common “childhood” illnesses to just around the time that they were becoming common.

In that time maybe 1/3-1/2 of the roughly 58 books covered how epidemic diseases fucked with the life of this boarding school (usually only one or two chapters, but that’s still a serious number of words).

I don’t know if people that are maybe younger gen xers to zoomers understand fully how common epidemic disease was before vaccines and how it could devastate learning and life.

And I’m not even just talking about flu. Measles, mumps, rubella, scarlet fever & their after effects.

TB (often shown in books due to a symbiotic relationship between the #ChaletSchool and a tb sanitarium - some children even lost parents to it in the series) & polio (not shown “on screen” but recovering people were)

So anyway, between the clear “these diseases are no joke and fuck shit up on a regular basis” message in these books that I love and my interest in medical history it’s a complete mystery why anyone would be anti vax or see so called childhood diseases as nbd, let alone in such numbers as could lead to a huge measles outbreak.

London measles warning: Outbreak could hit tens of thousands https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-66200444

Warning measles could hit tens of thousands in London

The rest of the UK is considered to be at low risk of the virus taking off.

BBC News
These diseases were so common, so spreadable that we had honest to god epidemic hospitals to help quarantine people. Those in the fictional chalet school often had to reorganise the school to set up a quarantine system. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fever_hospital
Fever hospital - Wikipedia

So anyway, fgs get vaccinated. If you’re not sure and in the uk (def if you’re a citizen; not sure if resident) your registered gp will have on record if you have been fully vaccinated against all the various “childhood” diseases. If you haven’t they will vaccinate you for free.
So please go do that. If nothing else, it will save you from -at best- a great deal of inconvenience if you get infected, and at worst the potential of death or permanent after effects (if not for you then the immunocompromised person you could infect.)
And also I guess that I love the #ChaletSchool, extremely problematic worts and all for the nuance they have (which far outstrips Blyton), sense of place, and an interesting insight in to attitudes of a woman and her readership between 1923 and 1970.