Review of Margaret Dickinson's book Pauper's Gold, 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 8th May 2006, and is reproduced with Julie's kind permission.
PAUPER'S GOLD
Pauper's Gold is a romantic saga set in the Peak, the 21st novel from
Margaret Dickinson. The title hides a bitter-sweet meaning and is set in
the days when King Cotton kept thousands of hands busy in the
spinning mills, specifically during the scandalous era of the workhouse
apprentice system. The author has undertaken detailed historical
research into the textile industry of Cheshire and Derbyshire in the
1800s and brings her story to life through the use of many Peak District
place names and surnames.
Her fictional Wyedale mill is based on the real-life Cressbrook mill,
sharing the same beautiful setting at the bottom of a steep hill. This is
where our heroine, Hannah Francis, is sent to work in a cotton mill on
the river Wye. Illegitimate and newly separated from her mother in a
Macclesfield workhouse, the girl is only 12 years old but with a keen
intelligence that defies her lack of education.
Hannah is never to see her mother again. She has to grow up quickly,
witnessing the tragic end of some of her young fellow workers, including
her first sweetheart, through the cruelty of the cotton magnate who holds
their lives in his hands by virtue of their apprenticeship indentures. This
man nurses a different kind of danger to Hannah as she blossoms into a
beautiful teenager.
Punished for attempting to run away to look for her mother, Hannah
finally makes her escape from Wyedale mill, biding her time to return
and avenge her childhood friends. Her intentions give rise to unexpected
conflict between revenge and romance, yet her basic honesty is never
compromised and readers will enjoy a satisfying outcome at the
culmination of a 500-page read that rather begs a sequel.
Pauper's Gold, published by Pan at £5.99 , is available through local
outlets. Margaret Dickinson will be signing copies of her book at the
Peak Festival, Hassop Country Bookshop, on Sunday 28 May 2006, 7.30 pm.