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Formats
Paperback Details
  • 01/2022
  • 9781398408135
  • 368 pages
  • $$20.95
Epub Details
  • 01/2022
  • 9781398408142
  • 368 pages
  • $$4.50
Alison Huntingford
Author
A Ha’penny Will Do

Adult; Fiction; (Market)

Love, dreams and destitution. Three members of one family are linked by their struggle to survive poverty and war at the turn of the century. Kate, a homesick, lonely Irish immigrant, dreams of being a writer. After difficult times in Liverpool, she comes to London looking for a better life. Hoping to escape from a life of domestic service into marriage and motherhood, she meets charming rogue, William Duffield. Despite her worries about his uncertain temperament, she becomes involved with him. Will it be an escape or a prison? Fred is a restless elder son, devoted to his mother yet locked in a tempestuous relationship with his father. War intervenes and he secretly signs up to serve abroad. Is his bad reputation deserved? What will become of him? Joe, too young to sign up for WW1, is left to endure the hardships of war on the home front and deal with his own guilt at not being able to serve. He starts an innocent friendship with his sister-in-law which sustains him through hard times. Will he survive the bombs, the riots, the rationing and find true love in the end? These are their intertwined and interlocking stories told through the medium of diaries, letters and personal recollections, based on the author’s family history covering the period of 1879–1920. The truth is never plain and rarely simple.
Reviews
Amazon.co.uk

B W Clayton

5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read

Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 24 February 2022

I won this book in a Facebook competition and couldn’t wait to start reading it as it sounded right up my street. I knew the book was based on the author’s family history covering the period from 1879 to 1920. However, I wasn’t sure if I would like the way it was presented in the form of the diary of a young Irish girl, Kate McCarthy. I need not have worried for the story soon drew me in and was a real page-turner. I also found the short excerpts from the diaries convenient if I only had time to read a few pages. Kate’s family leaves Ireland for Liverpool looking for a better life, but then she moves on to London and into domestic service. She falls in love with the charming William Duffield and yet she has doubts about his uncertain moods. The story is well written and highlights the extreme poverty and hardships that folk endured at this time. Added to Kate’s diary excerpts are those of her son, Joe, and also letters from her eldest son, Fred, during his time serving as a soldier in World War 1. Again, the accounts are movingly written and create a vivid picture of the past.

News
01/31/2022
Author’s own family feature in new novel A Ha’penny Will Do

Her authentic portrayal of life at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th Centuries features real people from her family tree

Ivybridge author Alison Huntingford’s third book in her family historical fiction series - A Ha’penny Will Do – has been published.

Her authentic portrayal of life at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th Centuries features real people from her family tree in a fictional story of their lives in Ireland, Liverpool and London at a time of social turmoil, the advent of the Great War and the Great Depression of the 1920s.

There are none of the posh frocks and aristocrats of many novels set in this period - instead we get an insight into the lives of the author’s ancestors and the lives they were living - struggling to get by, hardship and poverty. There is no guarantee of a happy ending in this tale of real life.

Alison explores the seamy and gritty side of life as the Victorian era came to an end and the Edwardian era began.

A Ha’penny Will Do features the three interlocking stories of Kate McCarthy Duffield, Fred Duffield and Joe Duffield through diary entries and letters.

Alison, who lives near Ivybridge, had previously published The Glass Bulldog and short story Someone Else in the same series. She has spent a year writing the 368-page latest novel.

She said: “The people who feature in my novels are real people from my family tree. I have been able to do some research on how they lived and where they lived and I have then taken their lives and created stories so that my own ancestors are the heart of the novel.

“Using real people from my own family as the lead characters in the book has given me a stronger than usual emotional bond to the novel.

“I have researched and imagined the lives that they were living 100-150 years ago but throughout the writing process I have felt very emotionally involved with them as people and as characters in the book.

Formats
Paperback Details
  • 01/2022
  • 9781398408135
  • 368 pages
  • $$20.95
Epub Details
  • 01/2022
  • 9781398408142
  • 368 pages
  • $$4.50
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