The Hunkin family is a step or two above poverty, but they have their worries. Stan Hunkin, a bear of a man, is controversial because of his newfangled ways of fishing. And he terrorizes his family. His wife, Sybil, is sickly and bedridden. Little Jamie is also somewhat sickly and mild-mannered, a sin as far as his father is concerned. Winnie and Dora are fraternal twins. Winnie is pretty and knows it. Dora--well, Dora is not so stunning, but she loves her job as a teacher's helper, so, naturally, her father threatens to make her quit. Young Tom Trewin, who works at the mine, has always liked Dora, but he doesn't stand a chance. Fate is cruel as obstacles drive them apart. Dora and Tom get on with their lives, and it takes World War I to bring them together again. Once more Aitken delivers an engrossing tale that pulls the reader right into a finely rendered world.
Maria HattonCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
--This text refers to an alternate
Hardcover
edition.
About the Author
the grandaughter of a miner killed in the Levant mine disaster. She has had three novels published under her own names as well as various textbooks poems, stories, and plays.