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'Happy? Let me tell you bow happy I am, mother. You took on the job of marriage, didn't you? I didn't. You are supposed to be the mother. I'm not. But that's what you've made me.'
'Now, look...' her mother started. 'No, you Look. Do you know who cooked the dinner when we get home at night? Me. Do you know who does the shopping at the week-end? Me.'
It is the time of the Miners' Strike, and feelings in the small town where Violette lives are running high, relationships are fraught and families divided.
After her mother left them to pursue her own independence, Violette resents her father’s attempts to carry on as normal. Bitter at her mother's desertion, yet desperate for her understanding, Violette s emotions are thrown further into turmoil by her involvement with her mother's friend, Alan...
'Come on, V. You're a big girl now,' her Dad said. 'Don't let's have any more tears. ''Don't worry, there won't be any tears from me. I've done all the crying I'm going to do. You've been telling me to grow up. Well, now I have.'
This is Gwen Grant's most challenging novel to date, about a young girl's growing awareness of herself and those around her.
".. .written with great integrity... has much to offer..." . T.E.S.
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