Showing posts with label Devon Book Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Devon Book Reviews. Show all posts

Friday 19 April 2024

A Torrington Scandal. 'The Ordeal of Miss Lucy Jones'

A Devon author who specialises in breathing life into true stories from the past has chosen a remarkable Torrington story for her latest book, The Ordeal of Miss Lucy Jones.

In 1879, the effigies of two local people were tarred, feathered and burned on Torrington Common by a disorderly crowd of three thousand people. Who were the two victims, and why were they being publicly shamed?

‘I was fascinated by a report of the event in a nineteenth century newspaper,’ said author Liz Shakespeare, who lives near Bideford, ‘so I decided to find out more.’

Incidents of ‘rough music’ were not uncommon at the time.  A crowd of people, often in disguise, would march to the houses of those who had committed an offence against society, often a couple who were believed to be having an illicit affair. The crowd would make a terrible racket by banging pots and pans and blowing horns, and sometimes effigies of the couple were burnt. However, this event in Torrington was on an unprecedented scale.

‘One of the effigies was of Miss Lucy Jones, the daughter of a Torrington doctor who lived in Castle House,’ said Liz. ‘As a church visitor to the poor, she had to meet regularly with the curate, Reverend Francis. He was very unpopular, so when someone claimed to have seen him and Lucy ‘acting improperly’ together on the Common, the people of Torrington seized the opportunity to be rid of him.’

The ensuing enquiry, culminating in the burning of the effigies, was reported in no less than fifty-two newspapers throughout Britain, and all included the name of Lucy Jones.

‘It would have been a terrible time for her,’ said Liz. ‘The investigation into Reverend Francis’ behaviour was reported in great detail in the local newspaper. I studied this carefully, and although there were plentiful reasons for his unpopularity, I am convinced that Lucy was innocent of any wrongdoing.’

Liz’s novel draws on extensive historical research to tell the story from Lucy’s point of view. Lucy Jones liked to walk on the Common and to take excursions by train to Bideford and Instow, and the novel describes Torrington and the surrounding area as it was in the 1870’s.

Reverend Francis had to leave the town as a result of the scandal. ‘But after the burning of the effigies,’ Liz said, ‘Lucy was afraid to leave the house. Knowing that her name would be forever associated with the scandal, she despaired of ever being able to marry her childhood sweetheart.’

While researching the book, Liz particularly enjoyed walking on Torrington Common, as Lucy had done.

‘As I studied the history of the Common, I came to understand what a powerful influence it has had on the people of Torrington. Their grazing rights gave them an independence and a determination to unite and organise which enabled them to get rid of Reverend Francis, and I believe that determination still survives today.’

Torrington is famous for its Mayfair, and for the hugely successful bonfires organised by the Torrington Cavaliers which raise a lot of money for local charities, and take place on the same spot as the burning of the effigies in 1879.

Liz Shakespeare has been writing for more than thirty years, this is her seventh book. All her books are set in North Devon and are based on true stories.

The Ordeal of Miss Lucy Jones will be launched at The Plough Arts Centre in Torrington at 2pm on Thursday 25th April. Booking is essential, tickets are £6 to include tea and cake. Liz will give a talk on the background and writing of the novel, and there will be the opportunity to buy signed copies.

Liz will also be speaking at Parracombe Arts and Literary Festival on May 6th, Bude Literary Festival on May 17th, RHS Rosemoor on May 18th, and Torrington Library on June 13th.

After 25th April, The Ordeal of Miss Lucy Jones can be purchased from local outlets, or ordered post-free from www.lizshakespeare.co.uk.

A Torrington Scandal. 'The Ordeal of Miss Lucy Jones'  by Devon author Liz Shakespeare.

Devon author, Liz Shakespeare, in Torrington Market.
Devon author, Liz Shakespeare, in Torrington Market.
 
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The Ordeal of Miss Lucy Jones by Liz Shakespeare
Letterbox Books - 336 pages Publication date 25/4/2024
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For further details or to purchase the book
Contact: Liz Shakespeare 

Thursday 13 July 2023

A Devon Summer with Liz Shakespeare

A Devon author, who specialises in breathing life into true stories from Devon’s past, is looking forward to a busy summer. Liz Shakespeare will be attending a number of events this summer to sign copies of her books and to talk to members of the public.

Liz said, ‘Writing is a solitary activity, so I really look forward to opportunities to meet readers when I give talks or attend book signings throughout Devon.’

She has written six books set in Devon, bringing to life the stories she finds in old newspapers, on gravestones and in parish records. Liz, who lives in Littleham, has a long Devon ancestry which she feels has given her a good understanding of the county and its people. Her most recent book, The Song of the Skylark, tells the true story of a young girl who was sent out as a parish apprentice to work on a remote Devon farm.

‘I am currently working on my seventh book,’ Liz said. ‘This one is set in Torrington in the nineteenth century and is again based on a true story. It will be available to buy next spring.’

Liz will be signing copies of all six of her books at the following events:

In the Magpie Marquee at the Mid-Devon Show on July 22nd

Clovelly Maritime Festival on July 23rd

Launceston Show on July 27th North Devon Show on August 2nd

Hartland Farmers’ Market on August 6th Okehampton Show on August 10th

Chagford Show on August 17th North Molton Country Fair on August 20th

Holsworthy Show on August 24th Torridge Art and Craft Market on August 26th

Lustleigh Show on August 28thClovelly Lobster and Crab Feast on September 3rd
 
 Liz Shakespeare book signing at events throughout Devon
 Liz Shakespeare will be book signing at events throughout Devon
 Liz Shakespeare book signing at events throughout Devon
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Liz’s books can also be ordered post-free from her website www.lizshakespeare.co.uk  


Thursday 15 July 2021

Event full Summer for 'Books from Devon' author, Liz Shakespeare

As Covid restrictions ease, one Devon author is looking forward to meeting readers again. Liz Shakespeare, whose books are inspired by the people, history and landscapes of Devon, will be attending a number of events this summer to sign copies of her books and to talk to members of the public.

Liz said, ‘Over the past year I have been able to continue writing, and I published my most recent book The Song of the Skylark in October 2020 with a launch on Zoom, but I have missed meeting readers at my usual talks and book signings throughout Devon.

She has written six books set in Devon, bringing to life the stories she finds in old newspapers, on gravestones and in parish records. Liz has a long Devon ancestry which she feels has given her a good understanding of the county and its people. The Song of the Skylark tells the true story of a young girl sent out as a parish apprentice to work on a remote Devon farm.

Liz will be signing copies of all six of her books in the Magpie Marquee at the following events:
  • Mid-Devon Show on July 24th
  • Hartland Farmers’ Market on August 1st
  • Sidmouth Folk Festival on August 2nd
  • Honiton Show on August 5th and 6th
  • Clovelly Maritime Festival on August 8th
  • Okehampton Show on August 12th
  • Bideford Pannier Market on August 21st
  • North Molton Country Fair on August 22nd 
  • High Bickington Fete on August 28th
Eventful Summer for Devon Author, Liz Shakespeare
Author, Liz Shakespeare and her Books from Devon
Devon author, Liz Shakespeare at the Mid-Devon Show 2019..
 Devon author, Liz Shakespeare at the Mid-Devon Show 2019.

Thursday 25 July 2019

Liz Shakespeare Reviews 'A Breath of Moonscent: Memories of a Devon Childhood' by Allan Boxall

The publication of a new book set in Devon is always good news, but the publication of one as captivating as A Breath of Moonscent: Memories of a Devon Childhood is a cause for celebration. There are few authors who know rural Devon well enough to write about it convincingly but Allan Boxall, now in his early eighties, knows it well and worked on A Breath of Moonscent for almost twenty years before he ventured to publish it. His hard work has paid off. The book describes the area in intimate and affectionate detail and will delight anyone who loves the Devon countryside and its people.
Allan Boxall moved to North Devon with his parents during the Second World War, when he was four years old. It was a wonderful childhood, Allan was free to roam the countryside and he soon made friends, acquiring a Devon accent along the way. He attended school in Dolton and then Torrington, and worked on a farm for eighteen months before eventually leaving Devon to join the Navy.

A Breath of Moonscent focusses on an area of North Devon that has been lovingly documented before. The Dolton area was the subject of much work by the eminent photographer James Ravilious, who created an invaluable record of rural life when he worked for the Beaford Photographic Archive. The aim of the project was to capture the very special and individual nature of North Devon just as it was starting to change. Allan Boxall’s written account depicts the same area at an earlier time, before change was envisaged, and he portrays in words what Ravilious achieved in images.

This is not a romanticised account of rural life. There are hardships, there are deaths, there are regrets, but the author shows that these events are part of the natural cycle of life. Reading his portrayals of the people of Dolton, one feels one has known them personally – or, at least, seen a Ravilious photograph of them:

‘Tom Baker was a tough old fellow, gnarled and stringy as a war-scarred tomcat, a face weather-beaten and ravaged by seventy years of sun, rain, and biting winds, pocked by the savage stings of angry wasps which had attacked him when he accidently hacked into their nest whilst paring a hedge, mean and short-tempered through decades of failed harvests which he remembered more than the successful ones.’

Some of the people Boxall writes about were indeed photographed by Ravilious in later years including one of Ravilious’s favourite subjects, Archie Parkhouse, who is as familiar from Boxall’s description as he is in the photographs.

Until comparatively recent times, life in North Devon was dominated by the seasons and the weather, because most people either worked on the land, or walked or cycled along miles of narrow lanes to reach school or work. Boxall recalls in loving detail the skeletal woods and barren fields of winter, the magical return of spring when ‘Snowdrops lined the brook like a carpet of green-tinted snow’, the summer hedgerows ‘awash with summer seas of umbellifers and red campion; honey bees and bumble bees, wood wasps and butterflies; a kaleidoscope of pastel colours shimmering and swaying,’ and autumn, ‘with the beech leaves golden, the oak secreting fawn-brown acorns neat in their pitted cups.’

Alongside the lyrical descriptions of landscape, there are many amusing stories. The account of moving house, - when a steep, stony lane had to be descended with a china cabinet, Calor gas stove and other household bits and pieces piled high on a cart drawn by an excitable horse - is likely to make the reader laugh out loud.

A Breath of Moonscent takes us back to a magical era in North Devon, when life was hard but the rewards were great; when there was no roar of distant traffic, when the stars were brighter, and the silence was disturbed only by the hoot of an owl or the bark of a fox.
Liz Shakespeare Reviews 'A Breath of Moonscent: Memories of a Devon Childhood' by Allan Boxall
Devon Author Allan Boxall
A Breath of Moonscent: Memories of a Devon Childhood by Allan Boxall  Published by Blue Poppy Publishing 25/7/2019
A Breath of Moonscent: Memories of a Devon Childhood by Allan Boxall
Archie Parkhouse - Photograph by James Ravilious for the Beaford Archive  © Beaford Arts
Archie Parkhouse. Photograph by James Ravilious for the Beaford Archive  © Beaford Arts
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A Breath of Moonscent: Memories of a Devon Childhood by Allan Boxall
Published by Blue Poppy Publishing
Available from www.bluepoppypublishing.co.uk or from bookshops.
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Liz Shakespeare is the author of five books set in Devon. 
Tap here to visit Liz Shakespeare's website
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About Beaford Arts "The Beaford Archive is an extraordinary collection of material about North Devon dating back to 1890. It is best known for its photographs by James Ravilious, for whom the Archive was his life’s work, and it was one of the first commissions taken on by Roger Deakins, now an Oscar-winning cinematographer." 
Tap this link to visit "HERE: Uncovering North Devon"