Jason Wallace

SilverDell Event

Available
***

The Palace of Strange Girls

Written by Sallie Day

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Book Synopsis:

I-SPY AT THE SEASIDE Hello, children! Welcome to your very own I-Spy Book. In these pages you'll be able to look for all kinds of secret, exciting things that are found only by the sea. Blackpool, 1959.

The Singleton family is on holiday. For seven-year-old Beth, just out of hospital, this means struggling to fill in her 'I-Spy' book and avoiding her mother Ruth's eagle-eyed supervision. Her sixteen-year-old sister Helen, meanwhile, has befriended a waitress whose fun-loving ways hint at a life beyond Ruth's strict rules.

But times are changing. As foreman of the local cotton mill, Ruth's husband Jack is caught between unions and owners whose cost-cutting measures threaten an entire way of life. And his job isn't the only thing at risk.

When a letter arrives from Crete, a secret re-emerges from the rubble of Jack's wartime past that could destroy his marriage. As Helen is tempted outside the safe confines of her mother's stern edicts, with dramatic consequences, an unexpected encounter inspires Beth to forge her own path.Over the holiday week, all four Singletons must struggle to find their place in a shifting world of promenade amusements, illicit sex and stilted afternoon teas, in this touching and extraordinarily evocative novel.
 

Reader's Review:

Thoroughly enjoyable book. My attention first captured by comparison with “Behind the scenes at the Museum” and secondly by the opening sentence. The book well captures the feeling of the late 1950’s generally and of Blackpool and the cotton towns. An odd quibble concerning accuracy, but someone living away from the area would probably not pick up on this. The story did finish a bit abruptly, would have liked more at the end, but definitely a “can’t put down” book. Last comment - the book was, for me, hard to hold and handle.

 

Reviewed by Mrs. Willox on 10/07/2008

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