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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Historical / General
  • Language:English
  • Pages:252
  • eBook ISBN:9781631924354

The Poison Glen

by Gillian Rothwell Rose

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview
Reaching across time, this book follows the lives of two women, their families, and their generations that followed. Mary Ann Oxley was born into poverty in the town of Wigan, England, which was permanently shrouded in a poisonous black smog, her rivers running with the ooze of industry. The booming Industrial Revolution brought wealth to some but only misery and abject poverty to others. Eliza Jane Skelton was born in the county of Yorkshire to a privileged family where the countryside was lush and green, with rolling ridges of woods dipping down to broad valleys. She was sheltered from the harsh realities of life and took for granted her place in society. This would leave her with little to combat the hardships that would come from the tragic results of wrong decisions. This story will take the reader to England, through the dreadful working conditions of child labor in the late eighteen hundreds, and on to the harsh realities of War. You will travel across India, into darkest Africa, and to the prisoner of war camps of Nazi Germany, and eventually find yourself on the shores of the United States of America Long eBook Description Reaching across time, this book follows the lives of two women, their families, and their generations that followed. People from entirely different walks of life, their lives are inexorably joined together by love, hate and the hand of fate. Beginning in the late 1800’s, the northern England town of Wigan, due to its industries of cotton mills and coal mines, was permanently shrouded in a cloud of poisonous black smog, her rivers running with the ooze of industry. The county of Yorkshire was just sixty miles west of Wigan, but it might have been a world away. Here the countryside was lush and green, with rolling ridges of woods dipping down to broad valleys, where farms nestled in rich fields. Even though there were coal mines in the county of Yorkshire, they had not yet scarred the landscape or polluted the sky with their great clouds of
Description
Reaching across time, this book follows the lives of two women, their families, and their generations that followed. People from entirely different walks of life, their lives are inexorably joined together by love, hate and the hand of fate. Beginning in the late 1800’s, the northern England town of Wigan, due to its industries of cotton mills and coal mines, was permanently shrouded in a cloud of poisonous black smog, her rivers running with the ooze of industry. The county of Yorkshire was just sixty miles west of Wigan, but it might have been a world away. Here the countryside was lush and green, with rolling ridges of woods dipping down to broad valleys, where farms nestled in rich fields. Even though there were coal mines in the county of Yorkshire, they had not yet scarred the landscape or polluted the sky with their great clouds of grime. Mary Ann Oxley was born into poverty in the town of Wigan, where the booming Industrial Revolution, while bringing wealth to some, brought only misery and abject poverty to others. She lived her life in the shadow of the cotton mills and, in that age of indifference, was put to work at the tender age of six to supply the demands of a fast growing nation. Her older brother Tommy was sent to the coal mines. Wigan’s coal mines, at that time, had some of the deepest shafts and worst safety records in the country. A miner’s life hung daily by a thread. If he didn’t die in a mining disaster, he was destined to live out his life underground, choking on lungs filled with coal dust and skin permanently stained black as the coal he pulled from the earth. Eliza Jane Skelton, born into a privileged family, was sheltered from the harsh realities of life. Living a spoiled and pampered existence, she took for granted her place in society. That would leave her little with which to combat the hardships that would come from the tragic results of wrong decisions. This story will take the reader to England, through the dreadful working conditions of child labor in the late eighteen hundreds, and on to the harsh realities of War. You will travel across India, into darkest Africa, and to the prisoner of war camps of Nazi Germany, and eventually find yourself on the shores of the United States of America.
About the author
Gillian Rothwell Rose was born in England in 1944. She came to the United States in 1962 and settled in Ohio. This book was written for her three sons, Mike, Mark and Steve, so that they would know their English heritage. She now resides in Florida with her husband Terry Rose.