Michelle Rawlins
AS war rages and bombs start to fall on Sheffield in the autumn of 1940, the brave women who are helping to keep the wheels turning at the vital Vickers steelwork factory must rally together in the face of danger, heartbreak and unbearable loss.
Inspired by her research into the real-life stories of the
women who worked in the factories that lined the River Don during the Second
World War, Michelle Rawlins (pictured below) sweeps us back into the trials, triumphs and
tragedies of a group of plucky Vickers friends.
Working relentless and exhaustingly long shifts in
windowless factories amidst deafening noise and dangerous conditions was a huge
culture shock for many of these women who had walked through factory doors for
the first time.
Steel Girls in the Blitz is the fifth book in this
much-loved series and once again highlights the hardships, strength and
resilience of the Vickers workers as they took on risky jobs like driving cranes
or toiling in the red-hot conditions of the foundries, and made sacrifices day
in and day out.
But another war is brewing for Hattie at home... a battle between her mother and her dad over
his drunken episodes. Vinnie spends every penny that Hattie and her mum earn
and Hattie is desperate to help her mother in any way she can. With a sea of
domestic woes mounting up, she is going to need the help of her Vickers factory
friends.
Meanwhile Betty – always the first to help anyone in need –
is overjoyed to learn that her fiancé William will be coming home to complete
his training as an RAF pilot but when the bombs start to fall, she fears he may
be in greater danger than ever.
And young Patty, who has been forced to grow up by witnessing the atrocities of war, has never been prouder of her sweetheart Archie than in his role as an Air Raid Warden. But having seen the true cost of war, is Archie struggling more than Patty could ever imagine? As the bombs rain down on Sheffield, and with heartbreak on the horizon, can the steel girls find shelter in each other and hold on to the hope that they so desperately need?
Brimming with the emotional intensity and ever-present
dangers, fears and uncertainties of wartime, this new chapter for the gutsy
Steel Girls in the Blitz delivers all the nostalgia, drama, warmth and sense of
family, friendship and community that makes Rawlins’ sagas such a reading delight.
Based on the author’s mantra that ‘it’s always the most
ordinary people who have the most extraordinary stories,’ this is an impeccably
researched and richly evocative series filled with good old Yorkshire humour, the
awe-inspiring courage of the Sheffield factory women, and provides a window on to
what it was like to live, love and work through the long, hard years of wartime.
(HQ, paperback, £8.99)
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