by Frances Mc Neil (Author)
When Jessica Price was a little girl, her father, a shoemender, gave her a beautiful new pair of shoes with a sixpence hidden in the toe of one. From the fairies, he explained: 'For luck, and to say you have far to go in life.' But in this captivating novel set in working-class Leeds in the 1920s, it is Jess who, with her generous heart, makes her own luck. Growing up in the aftermath of the Great War, Jess is torn between her hen-pecked father and cantankerous, ambitious mother. For amusement she creates alternative fairy-tales - mixing glass slippers, seven league boots and red dancing shoes - while submitting to her mother's strict Catholic upbringing. Following a disastrous spell as housekeeper to the local priest, she then works happily in the office of her uncle's shoe factory and falls in love with her childhood soul-mate and adopted cousin, Wilf, who dreams of being a great artist and sculptor. But it is only when she has to rescue her godchild, Leila, from an orphanage that Jess's path is truly set, allowing her to step into an enchanted future. A story of courage, loyalty and enduring love, SIXPENCE IN HER SHOE is told with wonderful humour and verve.Frances McNeil's great gift is to show us that every life is magical - not just those in fairy-tales - and that at the heart of every person is a search for home.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 352
Publisher: Orion
Published: 17 Aug 2006
ISBN 10: 0752874322
ISBN 13: 9780752874326
Book Overview: Set in Leeds - excellent for local publicity A quality novel - it will attract wonderful reviews and help to build this special new storyteller Praise for Frances McNeil: 'This beautifully evoked slice of regional experience offers universal appeal ... a colourful network of characters leaps from the pages' Guardian 'An exquisite novel ... McNeil's observations about the Suffragette movement are particularly well drawn, highlighting with gentle satire the gulf between middle and working class aspirations. The result is acerbic realism elegantly told' Big Issue SOMEWHERE BEHIND THE MORNING won the Elizabeth Elgin Award - a one-off award presented by HarperCollins for a debut novel that is regionally evocative