Black Country Orphan

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1900s
A01=Annie Murray
Author_Annie Murray
Birmingham
brothers
Category=FRH
Category=FS
Category=FT
Category=FV
chainmaking
daughter
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_historical-fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_romance
family
historical romance
love
mother
orphan
revolution
saga
siblings
sisters
turn of the century
women
workers rights

Product details

  • ISBN 9781529011791
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 163 x 243mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Feb 2021
  • Publisher: Pan Macmillan
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Black Country Orphan is a moving story of the courage and strength of women, by the Sunday Times bestselling author Annie Murray.

The early 1900s: Cradley Heath, a town in the Black Country near Birmingham and centre of the world’s chain-making trade.

Lucy Butler, a young girl crippled by a cruel accident, lives with her two brothers and widowed mother, a chain-maker barely making ends meet. When tragedy strikes, the Butler family is separated and Lucy is taken in by Bertha Hipkiss, another impoverished chain maker, struggling to look after her own family.

Lucy, while feeling the loss of her own family, relies on the company of Bertha’s two sons, charming Clem and straight-laced John. Though clever at school, Lucy knows she must leave and earn her keep, working many hours in the backyard forge. The five women toiling side by side, inevitably have their own friendships and squabbles. But they’re united in their hatred of loathsome middleman Seth Dawson, who treats the women with contempt, and keeps their pay punishingly low.

But by the 1910s, there is a movement stirring, as across the country workers begin unionising for their rights. For Lucy, Bertha and the women of Cradley Heath, the promise of a better life seems almost too much to hope for - and the fight may end up costing them everything . . .

Annie Murray was born in Berkshire and read English at St John’s College, Oxford. Her first ‘Birmingham’ story, Birmingham Rose, hit the Sunday Times bestseller list when it was published in 1995. She has subsequently written many other successful novels, including the bestselling Chocolate Girls and War Babies. Black Country Orphan is Annie’s twenty-sixth novel. Annie has four children and lives near Reading.

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