This Life of Grace, Paperback / softback Book

This Life of Grace Paperback / softback

Paperback / softback

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Description

This Life of Grace is a history and a biography. It tells the story of Grace Jarrold, the youngest of eight children, who lived for almost ninety years in the village of Plympton in Devon.

It also tells the story of the village over the last century, beginning with the Great War of 1914-1918, school life at that time as revealed in original documents, the building of 'homes fit for heroes' in the 1920s, and the General Strike of 1926.

It describes the dwindling of the old 'upstairs-downstairs' life, the approach of the Second World War and the Blitz of Plymouth.

After the tranquil period of fifteen that followed the War, things changed at great speed.

The influence of farming declined, leading to the closure of Plympton Market in 2002.

The village grew to ten times its size at the time of Grace's birth and it was absorbed into the City of Plymouth.

All the events are recorded as they affected local people.

Grace is at the heart of the story, much of it told in her words, related remarkably to the author in frank conversations as she relived her life when it was drawing to its close, during almost three years in a hospital bed. The life of her husband, Major William John Symons, of the Indian Army, is told by the same author in Stranger on the Shore, published in 2009.

In a pre-publication review, Peter Smith of Crane Books, writes, 'I liked This Life of Grace even more than Stranger, which I had found engrossing and very moving.

This Life of Grace is written with such warmth and deep affection and understanding, bringing the characters vividly to life.

Grace was a person of dignity and humility, an unusual combination, to which I felt a sense of eloquence, wit and humour should be added.

She was very much a "Grace".' From reviews of Stranger on the Shore 'This highly unusual book tells the story of an ordinary Cornish family affected over generations by an appalling genetic disease, and by the nightmare of not knowing who it will strike next.

Yet there is a kind of triumph amid the suffering. The sensitive writing on a subject that could hardly be more serious makes for an unforgettable read.' The People's Book Prize website 'The quiet courage of a family in dire adversity could not be better demonstrated...John Symons describes the tragedies that struck at the heart of a poor but devoted Cornish family. Humanity and the valour of the human spirit shine from every page.' This England

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£8.75

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