______________Wonderfully written, humorous and humane, and beautifully evocative of the time' - Independent Summer ReadsSmith's writing exudes wisdom and humour, and her descriptions ... are vividly drawn' - Times Literary SupplementHope and energy radiate from every sentence of this lovely volume as it emerges into the light after its long sojourn in the cemetery of forgotten books' - Daily Mail______________A classic and unforgettable tale of three girls who abandon their middle-class comforts for an adventure of a lifetime during the Second World War In 1943 Emma Smith joined the Grand Union Canal Carrying Company under their wartime scheme of employing women to replace the boaters. She set out with two friends on a big adventure: three eighteen-year-olds, freed from a middle-class background, precipitated into the boating fraternity. They learn how to handle a pair of seventy-two foot-long canal boats, how to carry a cargo of steel north from London to Birmingham and coal from Coventry; how to splice ropes, bail out bilge water, keep the engine ticking over and steer through tunnels. They live off kedgeree and fried bread and jam, adopt a kitten, lose their bicycles, laugh and quarrel and get progressively dirtier and tougher as the weeks go by. Maidens' Trip is a classic memoir of the growth to maturity of three young women in the exceptional circumstances of Britain at war.
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Product Details
Weight: 196g
Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
Publication Date: 18 Jul 2011
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781408801253
About Emma Smith
Emma Smith was born Elspeth Hallsmith in 1923 in Newquay Cornwall where until the age of twelve she lived with her mother and father an elder brother and sister and a younger brother. Her book Maidens' Trip was first published in 1948 and won the John Llewellyn Rhys Memorial Prize. Her second The Far Cry was published the following year and was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. In 1951 Emma Smith married Richard Stewart-Jones. After her husband's death in 1957 she went to live with her two young children in Wales where she proceeded to write and have published four successful children's books a number of short stories and in 1978 her novel The Opportunity of a Lifetime. Since 1980 she has lived in the London district of Putney. In 2008 she published The Great Western Beach her memoir of her Cornish childhood. Once again it gained widespread critical acclaim.
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