Lent Jewels

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A01=David Hughes
anthology
anthropology
Author_David Hughes
autobiographies
barbie
barbie books
birthday
british history
Category=DNL
Category=FV
classic literature
coming of age
dark
death
dickens
english literature
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_fiction
eq_historical-fiction
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
european history
feminism
friendship
genealogy
german
historical romance
history
history books
letters
literary
love story
marriage
marxism
motivational
mythology
paranormal
penguin classics
plays
poem
poems
race
regency
relationships
renaissance
russian
social
society
spirituality
theatre
trauma
travel writing
true story
vampires
victorian
world history
world war 1
world war 2
writing
ww2

Product details

  • ISBN 9780099435075
  • Weight: 171g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Apr 2003
  • Publisher: Cornerstone
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In one spring month of 1856 Archibald Campbell Tait (later to be Archbishop of Canterbury) and his wife Catharine suffered the loss of five daughters, aged between two and ten, in an epidemic of scarlet fever. In his diary Tait refers to these beloved children as 'the lent jewels'. The couple bore their bereavement with a fortitude that could be sustained only by faith. Without similar convictions, but in the hope of laying bare a comparable belief for himself, David Hughes explores the themes of love and loss, intermingling his own experience, both as child and father, with the story of another of Tait's contemporaries, someone with a different but nonetheless powerful focus on life, a man known only as 'Walter', author of the erotic memoir My Secret Life. At the same time Catharine was drowning her grief in words by writing a heartbreaking account of her children's deaths. All these presences, and more modern ones, haunt the chapters of this many-layered documentary. With a dexterity of style and abundance of sympathy that have made him so appealing a writer, Hughes now delves into two centuries of underlying attitudes to sex, dreams and mortality, in an effort to reconcile them in his own daily life. The result of his sometimes sad but always eager search is splendidly uplifting.
David Hughes is the author of eleven novels, including The Imperial German Dinner Service, But For Bunter and The Pork Butcher, which won the WH Smith Literary Award, as well as a critical biography of J. B. Priestley. He has reviewed books, theatre and films in many newspapers and is vice president of the Royal Society of Literature. With his wife, daughter and son he lives in north Lambeth and east Kent.

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