Diane Allen
WHEN two young girls are evacuated from Liverpool to the
heart of the Yorkshire Dales in wartime, they soon start hatching plans to
escape their rural billets and head back to the families they miss... and the
city they love.
The rural beauty and wild charm of the Dales once again form
the alluring backdrop to a compelling tale of family bonds, love, hope and
resilience from popular storyteller Diane Allen (pictured below) who was born in Leeds but
raised at her family’s farm deep in the Yorkshire Dales.
Using the stunning countryside surrounding her home near the
historic market town of Settle as her inspiration, Allen’s gritty novels are
proof that she has her finger firmly on the pulse of northern saga writing, and
the hardy Yorkshire folk who have for centuries made their home amongst the
hills and dales.
In Liverpool, where the large docks will almost undoubtedly
be an enemy target, lifelong friends Maggie Shaunessy and Lizzie Taylor, both
aged eleven, are heartbroken to be evacuated from their inner city homes to
rural Yorkshire. Lizzie is sent to live with a vicar in the village of Gargrave
while home-bird Maggie finds herself delivered by chauffeur to Hawith Hall, the
home of Lady and Lord Bradley.
The moorlands and fields of Yorkshire are a whole new world
for Maggie and Lizzie, and the hall and the vicarage are very different to the
homes they have left behind. Soon both girls are very homesick although, fortunately
for Maggie, she finds friendship in the form of Alice, a young servant at the
hall who takes Maggie under her wing.
But Liverpool isn’t the only place seeing life transformed
because change is coming to the Dales too, leaving the girls harbouring
desperate plans to run away... all the way back to Liverpool.
Allen, an observant and insightful writer, brings us a
fascinating cast of authentic characters in an enthralling tale packed with
emotion, drama and the harsh realities and struggles of youngsters whisked far
from home and family during the Second World War. Filled with Allen’s warm-hearted compassion and gritty evocation
of life in wartime, this poignant tale shines a light on the bonds of true
friendship, the comfort gained from shared adversity, and the enduring power of
love and family to transform even the darkest of days.
(Pan, paperback, £8.99)
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