Hope Street

Hope Street
Author: Pamela Young
Publisher: Coronet
Total Pages: 138
Release: 2011-01-20
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1444714260

This is the story of a family which has always lived in the heart of one of the traditional working class communities of the North. Originally immigrants from Ireland in the mid-nineteenth century, their saga, their triumphs and tragedies unfolded in the cobbled streets, working men's cottages and terraced houses of Horwich, near Manchester. They worked in the cotton mills and on the railways. Like most families at the time, they were good socialists and trade unionists. They also attended the local Spiritualist church. Spiritualism was free-thinking, modern and progressive too and went hand in hand with socialism. The family living on Hope Street North had problems every family has - and worse. Marriages broke up and they had more than their fair share of loss and heartbreak. Within the working class in those days there were many - now forgotten - class distinctions which caused painful rifts between the family. There was a violent bully too and an eviction which left a mother and her children wandering the streets penniless and homeless. A young girl was run over and killed by a horse and cart and another died of diptheria. An unmarried woman bound her abdomen tightly to disguise her pregnancy, and as a result her child was born with deformed legs. As a young woman, that child went on to elope with her lover and they both committed suicide. She died as she was born: in shame. The book that would become Hope Street started when Pamela Young felt compelled to write about her mother's childhood, of seeing things - spirits, angels - that other people couldn't see. Vivid memories of their family life came flooding back: coal dusk glistening on her father's scalp as he came home from work, the old army coats used as bedding and the dresser with doors missing because they'd been chopped up as firewood when times were hard. And swirling in and around these very vivid, often earthy memories of life in Hope Street were memories of the extraordinary spiritual phenomena that took place there. On one occasion a silver ball sped around the room. On another her father, asking for proof, was picked up by a spirit guide and lifted up into the air as light as a feather. Pamela would once see her mother engulfed in a cloud of ectoplasm and twice her mother gradually, and starting from her head down, disappeared before her eyes. But it was after her own marriage had broken up and her mother had died, when Pamela was in the depths of despair, that she found her own spiritual gift. Guided by the spirit of her mother, she began to fully understand the great project her mother had initiated.

Daughters of Liverpool

Daughters of Liverpool
Author: Annie Groves
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 14
Release: 2009-01-12
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0007287887

Evocative and heartrending saga of Liverpool during World War Two, from the author of AS TIME GOES BY – rising star Annie Groves

The Heart of the Family

The Heart of the Family
Author: Annie Groves
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 478
Release: 2012-10-18
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0007322690

The much-loved author of ACROSS THE MERSEY tells of Liverpool under bombardment as never before – but the Campion family refuses to give in.

As Time Goes By

As Time Goes By
Author: Annie Groves
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 516
Release: 2008-09-04
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0007283687

The Liverpool-based World War II saga from the ‘new Katie Flynn’

Catalog

Catalog
Author: Kansas State Teachers College of Emporia
Publisher:
Total Pages: 876
Release: 1893
Genre:
ISBN:

When the Lights Go On Again

When the Lights Go On Again
Author: Annie Groves
Publisher: HarperCollins UK
Total Pages: 482
Release: 2010-08-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0007352158

The tide is turning, but on the home front, the battle is far from over for the Campions...