The Dwelling Place - Catherine Cookson


Paperback - Good Condition

£1.50

When Cissie Brodie’s parents were taken by the fever in 1832, Cissie suddenly found herself the head of a family of nine brothers and sisters. She was just fifteen and the youngest was but a babe in arms, yet she decided that rather than have the family split up in the workhouse, she would try to find work to keep them all, for they would be happier together. But how? And where would they live?

To her relief, Cissie found a dwelling place. It was a mere shanty on the fells, true, but it was shelter and it was rent-free. She also gained a friend in Matthew Turnbull, the wheelwright, although his protection could not save her from the fierce emnity of the landowner’s daughter, nor from his son, Clive Fischel, In The Dwelling Place, Catherine Cookson tells with compassion and warmth of Cissie Brodie’s heroic fight to rear the family under appalling conditions of cold, near starvation and persecution in the class-conscious society of nineteenth-century England.

1 in stock

Description

The Dwelling Place by Catherine Cookson

In a good condition. There is creasing to the spine and cover. See photos for more details.

Additional information

Weight 202 g
Dimensions 17.6 × 10.3 × 2.1 cm
Condition

Format

Paperback

Writer

Catherine Cookson