TOMORROW,
JERUSALEM
BY
TERESA CRANE
THE
BLURB:-
1907: THE EARLY YEARS
OF THE CENTURY OF CHANGE...
Living a hand-to-mouth
existence in London's teeming docklands, Sally Smith knows little of
the working-man's fight for a living wage, even less of a woman's
battle for the vote, nothing at all of Europe's march towards war.
Yet these things will
affect her as profoundly as she is to affect all those whose lives
touch hers: Toby, the urchin she rescues from starvation; the Patten
family, stimulating and eccentric, whose orphanage becomes her first
real home; and Phillipe van Damme who, briefly and with love, shows
her a world she has never known before...
From
the squalor of the East End slums to the dreams of glory and the
carnage on the fields of Flanders, Tomorrow,
Jerusalem is a stirring evocation of a lost
generation and the passionate story of one woman's fight against the
odds.
THE
REALITY:-
I have to say, I was
quite uninspired by the title of this book, so it was put to the
bottom of my reading pile. Then I kind of fancied reading a tome
(this book was written in the eighties, when tomes were acceptable-
nowadays, if a book doesn't fit neatly into the 'around 400 pages'
ballpark, then agents and publishers baulk at you. Prats!) so I
picked it up. The title is actually inspired by a hymn (even a
heathen like myself realised that!) and it's a hymn I quite like and,
as I began to read, I realised why- 'England's green and pleasant
land' is the idealist's dream for many of our characters as they go
through their own personal struggles and try to create a more ideal
society.
The novel begins with
Charlotte's story, and it was this person whom I thought was going to
be the heroine of the story. I was quite surprised when it turned
out to be Sally, instead. It's very interesting how a shocking event
turns Charlotte's life around and changes her persona completely. A
bit of schadenfreude here- I actually found it quite funny how
un-maternal she was towards her daughter. I shouldn't laugh, but I
did and I can understand her lack of love, but I'm not going to be supplying you
with a spoiler. Some of the characters changed, some stayed exactly
the same and the writer gave us a very satisfactory selection.
This book was a
slow-burner for me. It wasn't totally gripping; but then I read it
at a very busy time when I couldn't have devoted my days to reading
anyway. Some of history had been very really well-researched and was
brought to life. It's interesting that I read about the struggle for
women's suffrage when the papers were full of celebrating 100 years
of women having the vote. The First World War documentation, as you
would expect, was grim. I kind of expected Sally's flight from
Belgium to be more harrowing (this was an exciting part of the book,
when the story really picked up pace) but it wasn't, and I was quite
glad for Sally. So, the characters did manage to touch me! I wanted
to shake Ben, for his rigid ways, but I kind of got that there would
be no point in doing so. Sally did all she could do regarding the
situation there.
I learnt a lot from
this book (including some new words) and I thoroughly enjoyed doing
so. The First World War was truly horrific but it bought people of
all classes and backgrounds together in their common cause and this
was cleverly depicted throughout. Life in Holloway Prison for the suffragettes (I've read about this subject before) was also highly unpleasant and was described so earnestly that you could almost SMELL the place... Did everyone get a happy ending?
I think so (although Peter had to make the best of a truly harrowing situation) and also, the only ending they all could have had.
Would I read more by
this author? Yes. It was published in the 1980s and was quite
typical of the blockbuster quality of the time and I quite like that, and hope the author has come up with more delights of the same ilk.
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