Struther shows Mrs. Miniver's gaiety and liveliness in light that she is oblivious to the impending war that will deeply affect her life. Mrs. Miniver and her family have the same troubles and pleasures like many other families. One of these pleasures is the day that their new car is scheduled to arrive. The family is excited and is anticipating the beautiful color and design of the car. Christmas shopping is the next event for Mrs. Miniver. Like most other mothers in Oxford, she has waited until the week before Christmas to do her shopping thus getting stuck in long lines with aggressive people. Realizing she will have yet another busy year, Mrs. Miniver decides it is time to invest in an expensive engagement book. This precious diary will hold all of her memories and events for an entire year. "To give it away is impossible, to lose it is disastrous, and to scrap it and start a new one entails a laborious copying out of all the entries that have already been made," thought Mrs. Miniver about the process of buying one. These three ordinary and simple events lead into the first day of spring. "Here, she would find herself thinking, is where I end and the outside world begins. It was exciting, but divisive: it made for loneliness." Her spirit and vitality remain even as the war becomes closer to reality.
Even though Mrs. Miniver and her