Review of Ruth Gordon's book A Sense of Place: Derbyshire in Fiction, by Julie Bunting
This review is by Julie Bunting, and was published originally in
The Peak Advertiser, the Peak District's local free newspaper,
on 25th September 2000, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
A SENSE OF PLACE: Derbyshire in Fiction
by Ruth Gordon
Ruth Gordon will be well known to all who spend any amount of time in the
Local Studies Library at County Hall in Matlock. Many readers (and writers)
owe a great debt of thanks to Ruth and the rest of the Library staff for
facilitating their researches through an in-depth knowledge of the material
at hand.
It now transpires that Ruth, familiar with countless factual and historical
publications, has since her schooldays been a keen reader of fiction
inspired by Derbyshire and the Peak District. And she must have been taking
notes, for her newly published booklet A Sense of Place offers a list of
titles which would last an average reader a good few years. The booklet
takes the form of a literary tour around the whole county, seen through the
story telling which the region has inspired. Readers with particular
preferences for places and subjects will appreciate the potted descriptions
given with the titles, especially useful where real places hide behind
fictional names.The author has also drawn on her own childhood to suggest
some first rate reading for children.
This most intriguing of tours begins on the outskirts of Sheffield and
moves through Grindleford and along the gritstone edges to Chesterfield
(meeting Sherlock Holmes on the eastern moors), carries on through the
Derbyshire coalfields, swings back to Ashover and Pentrich then on to Derby
and the county border. Returning northwards we alight at Ashbourne,
Hartington, Dovedale and Brassington before turning towards Crich, Cromford,
Wirksworth and places in between. Then up river to the Matlocks, Darley Dale
and Two Dales. After picking up on tales set in Winster, Youlgreave,
Bakewell, Monyash, Stoney Middleton and Eyam, the literary journey stops off
in Hathersage, Peak Forest, Castleton, Edale and Kinder. Buxton, as might be
expected, has a lot to offer the armchair traveller and the north-western
Peak brings the itinerary to a close.
Many of the books described are readily available through the library
service whilst a request may have to be put in for certain older ones held
in small numbers. Just a few of the rarest titles can be read only in the
reference local studies libraries at Chesterfield or County Hall - just the
opportunity to browse through the extensive range of creative writing, old
and new, held in these two libraries where collections are added to
constantly.
A Sense of Place : Derbyshire in Fiction (ISBN 0 903463 61 X) is
published by Derbyshire County Council,
Libraries & Heritage Department, and
is available through all county libraries, priced only £1.