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THE GRANITE CLIFFS
Love, life and loss in Edwardian England
Victoria Flower,
motherless and nearing womanhood, is beginning to chafe against the
restrictions of her life as the vicar's only daughter in a remote Cornish
mining town. Her honourable and well-meaning father, though disillusioned
by the impossibility of his spiritual task, thinks he has found a suitable
companion for her when he introduces a gentle, musical young curate into
the parish. Indeed a friendship blossoms, as Victoria finds a
fellow-sufferer in his rather gauche and awkward ways. All this is to
change, however, when a accident at the granite-pit brings Victoria into
close contact with stone-worker Daniel Olds, whose rugged muscularity she
has already secretly admired, and finds the admiration mutual. However,
there is no possibility of a match. Convention and society are against
them, and Dan is already promised to local girl, Mollie Coombs, who is not
likely to give up her beau without a struggle. The Curate, too, shows a
determined side, though he proves to have a secret of his own. Set at a
time when Edwardian convention was absolute and when the Penwith mining
industry was in crisis and decline, this book offers a lively glimpse at
the social and economic realities of love, life and loss in early
twentieth-century Cornwall.
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