Blog Tour/Q&A: Hattie’s Home by Mary Gibson

Hattie's Home blog tour

I’m delighted to be co-hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Hattie’s Home by Mary Gibson.  I have a wonderful, absolutely fascinating Q&A with Mary that will be of interest to all fans of historical fiction, local history and, most of all, to biscuit lovers!  Do be sure to check out the review by my co-host, 23 Review Street.

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Hattie's HomeAbout the Book

January 1947: The war is over, but London is still a wasteland.

After eight years in the ATS, Hattie Wright returns to a Bermondsey she doesn’t recognise. With so few jobs, she reluctantly takes work at the Alaska fur factory – a place rife with petty rivalries that she vowed never to set foot in again. But while she was a rising star in the ATS, Hattie’s work mates are unforgiving in her attempts to promote herself up from the factory floor.

After journeying across the world to Australia to marry her beloved, Clara is betrayed and returns penniless, homeless and trying to raise a child in the face of prejudice. While war widow, Lou, has lost more than most in the war. Her daughter and parents were killed in an air raid bomb blast and her surviving son, Ronnie, is fending for himself and getting into all kinds of trouble.

The lifelong friendship these women forge while working in the fur factory will help them overcome crippling grief and prejudice in post-war Britain and to find hope in tomorrow.

Praise for Hattie’s Home

‘This wonderfully descriptive book…is a must-read’ [OK! Magazine]
A fabulous, fascinating read.’ [Vanessa Feltz]

Format: Hardcover, eBook (464 pp.)         Publisher: Head of Zeus
Published: 11th January 2018                      Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk ǀ  Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Hattie’s Home on Goodreads


Interview with Mary Gibson, author of Hattie’s Home

Without giving too much away, can you tell me a bit about Hattie’s Home?

In the harsh winter of 1947 Hattie, Clara and Lou, three very different women, return to their pre-war jobs at the Alaska fur factory in Bermondsey. But none of them want to be there. Hattie has flourished in the ATS and resents being once more relegated to the factory floor. Clara, betrayed by her serviceman husband returns penniless, homeless and trying to raise a child in the face of prejudice. Lou has lost most of her family to the war. By day she works at the factory, by night she roams the bombsites half mad with grief. Scarred by their war time experiences, the women are forced to stay and rebuild their lives in a borough reduced to a wasteland by bombs. They forge an unlikely bond which sees them overcome crippling grief, harsh prejudice and post-war deprivation to find hope in a better tomorrow for themselves and their children

Your books are mainly set in Bermondsey, in South-East London, where you grew up.  What is it about that area that has made you want to feature it so prominently in your novels?

Although I moved away in 1996, the Bermondsey of the first half of the twentieth century is the place that is still most vibrant in memory for me.  Isolated in many ways, it was like a village at the exact geographical heart of London, a close-knit working class area, very poor but with a great community spirit. Because people could walk out of their doors to work at the factory on the corner, or to the pub on the other corner for their entertainment or the church on the other corner for spiritual sustenance, for many of my grandparents generation there was little need or opportunity to go elsewhere and they could live their entire lives without ever leaving Bermondsey. Life was all centred around the Docks, the food factories; the smelly leather and fur trades that grew up along the river. In fact, there were so many food factories in the area, it was known as the Larder of London. But then in the seventies when the docks closed, the area underwent a massive change, and within a generation the Bermondsey of my childhood had vanished and this was the lost world that I wanted to capture in my novels.

Many of the women in your books are factory girls.  What interests you about depicting the lives and experiences of these women?

I suppose I wanted to tell the unsung stories of women who seem to be missing from early twentieth century literature, unless it’s in the odd footnote.  Women, like my grandmother who worked at Pearce Duffs custard factory all her life, as well as doing office cleaning in the city offices before dawn. These women lived through extraordinary times, world wars, depressions, strikes and social unrest. And it was their point of view I thought should be heard. There were literally hundreds of factories packed into Bermondsey’s 1300 acres and all of my heroines are inspired by women relatives so I had a great fund of stories to draw on. Both of my grandmothers, my mother and my aunts were all factory girls and I too worked briefly as a Saturday girl at the Alaska fur factory which I feature in Hattie’s Home. My description of the horrendous ‘bambeater’ – a series of flailing bamboo rods that bashes the dirt and dust out of fur skins and into the workers’ lungs – comes from personal experience!

What do you think is the key to creating an authentic picture of a particular historical period?

Details! Particularly sensory and this is where I draw on personal experience or reminiscence as much as I can. For example, in Custard Tarts the detail came from an elderly relative who worked at Pearce Duffs custard factory and still remembered the sticky residue of custard powder in her hair which was impossible to get out! Smells are very important, especially in Bermondsey, where within the same street you could have the foul stink of Young’s glue factory battling with the sweet smell of California Poppy perfume from Atkinson’s cosmetic factory next door.

How do you approach the research for your books? Do you enjoy the process of research?

I love doing research for the books. I usually start with personal memorabilia – my parents left a very rich archive of photos, recorded and written reminiscences. I read general histories of the period to get a broader view then search out contemporary documents and newspapers at the wonderful Southwark Local Studies Library.

You’ve featured a variety of periods in your books but if you had to choose one to be transported back to, which would it be?

The Elizabethan age, but not as a poor person!

Do you have a special place to write or any writing rituals?

I’m fortunate to have a small study where I can shut myself away. I always start with a short meditation, which helps to silence the everyday chatter and focus my mind into the place where the stories arise.

Which other writers of historical fiction do you admire?

I grew up loving Rosemary Sutcliff and I’m a great admirer of Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall novels.  [Great choices, I love those too!]

What are you working on next?

The next book is set in late nineteen thirties Bermondsey. In many ways, as in today’s world, radicalisation was the response of young people to poverty and disadvantage. And I am following my heroine, who works at Crosse & Blackwell’s, from the soup kitchens of the South London Mission to the fight against Mosley’s fascists as she tries to make a better life for herself, her family and friends. [Gosh, that really sparks my interest!]

With book titles like Custard Tarts and Broken Hearts and Bourbon Creams and Tattered Dreams, I’m tempted to ask what your favourite biscuit is.  However, that would be far too obvious!  Instead, what biscuits do you think would best represent the characters in Hattie’s Home – Hattie, Lou and Clara?

As a biscuit connoisseur I love this question! The heroine, Hattie, has spent the last years of the war in Belgium as a sergeant in the ATS, where her horizons have expanded and she stands out as being different to the other Alaska factory girls when she returns. She is definitely a Belgian dark chocolate biscuit – slightly exotic, with a hint of bitterness and a definite snap to her character!  Clara is like a Custard Cream. With a sweet, melting heart, she’s had to develop a tough outer shell in order to protect her child and survive a devastating betrayal. Lou, who has lost most in the war, can only be a broken biscuit! In white paper bags available from Peak Frean’s factory outlet to staff or those who couldn’t afford a proper packet. They were assorted, jumbled up bits and pieces – but sometimes you would get a surprisingly undamaged biscuit among the wreckage – and this is Lou, who flits in and out of lucidity throughout the story. [Brilliant! I think I may include a biscuit-related question in all my Q&As from now on!]


Mary GibsonAbout the Author

Mary Gibson was brought up in Bermondsey, London.  In 2009, after a thirty year career in publishing, she took the opportunity of early retirement to write a book of her own! Her début novel, Custard Tarts and Broken Hearts, was inspired by the lives and times of her grandparents in World War One Bermondsey and went on to become a top ten Kindle best seller. It was selected as one of twenty titles for World Book Night 2015. Her second novel, Jam and Roses, about three sisters living in the Dockhead area of Bermondsey during the nineteen-twenties and her third novel, Gunner Girls and Fighter Boys, set in Bermondsey during World War Two, are available in e book, hardback and paperback, as is her fourth novel, Bourbon Creams and Tattered Dreams.

Connect with Mary

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Blog Tour: Beautiful Star & Other Stories by Andrew Swanston

Beautiful Star 2I’m thrilled to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for Beautiful Star & Other Stories by Andrew Swanston.   Andrew is the author of the exciting Thomas Hill series (The King’s Spy, The King’s Exile and The King’s Return) set in the English Civil War.  Incendium, the first in a new series set in the 1570s featuring lawyer and spy Christopher Ratcliff, was published in February 2017 (as A. D. Swanston).

As well as my review of Beautiful Star & Other Stories, I’m delighted to bring you a fascinating interview with Andrew.  Among other things, he talks about the most productive time for writing, the importance of detail to create historical authenticity and the benefits of ‘feet on the ground’ research.


Beautiful StarAbout the Book

History is brought alive by the people it affects, rather than those who created it.

In Beautiful Star we meet Eilmer, a monk in 1010 with Icarus-like dreams; Charles II, hiding in 1651, and befriended by a small boy; and Jane Wenham, the Witch of Walkern, seen through the eyes of her grand-daughter.  This moving and affecting journey through time brings a new perspective to the defence of Corfe Castle, the battle of Waterloo, the siege of Toulon and, in the title story, the devastating dangers of a fisherman’s life in 1875.

In Beautiful Star & Other Stories Andrew Swanston brings history to life, giving voices to the previously silent – the bystanders and observers, the poor and the peripheral – and bringing us a rich and refreshing perspective on the past.

Format: Paperback (256 pp.)         Publisher: The Dome Press
Published: 11th January 2018        Genre: Historical Fiction, Short Stories

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk ǀ  Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Beautiful Star & Other Stories on Goodreads


Interview with Andrew Swanston

The stories in Beautiful Star involve both real and imaginary characters.  Which do you find the more difficult to write?

Interesting question. Imaginary characters are easier in that, within the historical framework of the story, they can do and say and think and look like whatever one wants them to. Real characters are easier in that they bring their personalities and their stories with them.  Mixing the two is the most difficult task and what I like best.

What do you like about the short story format?  What are its challenges?

In Beautiful Star, Julia Paterson tells her friend Willy Miller that flowers are neither wild nor tame, they are just flowers. So it is, for me, with stories – some longer, others shorter, but all just stories with plots and characters, beginnings, middles and endings. As a boy I loved the Sherlock Holmes stories. Strong characters, fast-moving plots, atmospheric but not very descriptive.  Excellent examples of the art.

I’m sure that asking which of the stories in Beautiful Star you like best would be like asking you to choose a favourite child.  Instead, I’ll ask which was the ‘naughtiest child’- the story you found most challenging to write, and why?

I think ‘A Witch and a Bitch’ was the most difficult because in making Jane Wenham’s imaginary grand-daughter the narrator I had to try to imagine the feelings of a teenage girl seeing her grandmother absurdly condemned to death in cruel circumstances three hundred years ago.

If you could be transported back in time to a period of history when and where would it be?

The seventeenth century – a time of conflict and change – has always appealed to me, which is why I wrote the Thomas Hill stories.  During the War of the Three Kingdoms, I would have been a royalist and would have hoped to survive until the Restoration when the king and his court set a splendid example of debauchery and excess. Lovely.

You’ve written books set in the English Civil War (the Thomas Hill series), the Battle of Waterloo and, in your latest book Incendium, the reign of Elizabeth I.   What attracts you to a particular historical period?

I am most interested in how major events such as the massacre of the Huguenots, the execution of Charles I or the return of Napoleon from Elba would have affected the daily lives of the people of the time. What would they have been thinking?  Catholic retaliation in London, a republican tyranny, a French invasion? Poverty, starvation, disease?

What do you think is the key to creating an authentic picture of a particular historical period?

Detail, detail and more detail. Food, clothes, money, transport, anything and everything that enables the reader to ‘see’ a picture without its having to be described.

How do you approach the research for your books? Do you enjoy the process of research?

I love the research, especially meeting and talking to experts, who, without exception, I have found to be generous and supportive.  I also love libraries, most of all The British Library. Best of all, though, is what I call ‘tramping the streets’ – visits to Malmesbury, Romsey, Waterloo, Stationers’ Hall, St Monans and elsewhere, often accompanied by my willing assistant (wife).

Do you have a special place to write or any writing rituals?

I write in my little study, usually with the door closed. That tells everyone that I am working and should only be disturbed if war has been declared. I have no particular rituals but am most productive in the pre-drinks hours of three to six.

What other writers of historical fiction do you admire?

At the head of a long and distinguished list of ‘auto-buys’ are C J Sansom, Robert Harris and Rory Clements.  There are many others. [I agree.  Those are some of my favourites too!]

What are you working on next?

The sequel to Incendium, set in 1574.  I would very much like also to write another collection of shorter stories.

Thank you, Andrew, for those fascinating answers to my questions.  Now, read on for my review of Beautiful Star & Other Stories….

My Review

In Beautiful Star, the author has taken what might have been considered footnotes in history and fashioned them into compelling, character-driven stories.   I felt the stories really came alive when the author unleashed his writer’s imagination to conjure up the sights, sounds and smells of the period and to populate the historical fact with believable characters.

I simply devoured the stories in Beautiful Star and found something to enjoy, wonder at or be intrigued by in each of them.

In the title story, ‘Beautiful Star’, set in a Fife fishing village in 1875, the reader gets a wonderful insight into the lives of the fishermen and their families.  There is fascinating detail about the craft of ship building (including the local boats known as Fifies), the seasonal nature of life in the village driven by the movement of shoals of fish and the colourful itinerant workers who flock to St Monans during ‘the Drave’, when the herring shoals congregate in the Forth of Fife.   My favourite amongst these were the ‘fisher lassies’, who arrive to gut, sort and pack the herring.  Spending most of their time up to their elbows in fish guts and salt, the leisure time of these tough, hardworking women is spent knitting, often while going for an evening stroll.

The fisherman prove to be superstitious folk with intriguing customs like starting every voyage with dry feet (prepare to be amazed by how this is achieved).    But then, if you were setting sail in small boats for long periods of time then you’d probably be superstitious as well.  In fact, the dangers of the sea and the potential impact on individual families and the whole village of disaster become all too clearly revealed.  The story may be set in 1875, before satellite tracking and modern safety rules, but it still made me think of fisherman today and the perils they face on the open sea.

In ‘The Flying Monk’ we learn that experimentation with manned flight goes back further than you might think and did not start with the Wright Brothers.  The protagonist of this story, a monk called Eilmer, also witnesses two sightings of Halley’s Comet.  Such astronomical events were often viewed as harbingers of disaster. Observing the comet in 1066, the author has Eilmer remark, ‘It is a sign from God.  Mark it well and be prepared.  England’s enemies will come soon.’  He wasn’t wrong, was he?

A few highlights from other stories.  In ‘HMS Association’, set in 1708, instinctive, local knowledge of the sea is dismissed resulting in tragedy, emphasising the limitations of navigation in inclement weather at the time.  In ‘A Witch and a Bitch’, set in 1730, there is a reminder of how accusations of witchcraft were often directed at women viewed as ‘different’.  As the accused woman remarks, “If they want to hang me, they will.  An old woman on her own, they’ll find reasons enough if they choose.”   In ‘The Castle’, set in the latter part of the English Civil War, the chatelaine of Corfe Castle steadfastly tries to carry out a vow made to her dead husband to defend the castle from Parliament’s forces.  In the end, her future is determined by a man who thinks he knows better what’s good for her.  No change there then.    I particularly liked ‘A Tree’ set in 1651, probably the most impressionistic of the stories.  In it, events of the Restoration are seen through the eyes of a 7-year-old boy who has a chance encounter with a mysterious stranger whilst perched in a tree.

The book’s description states that ‘history is brought alive by the people it affects’.  I think the final story in the collection, ‘The Button Seller and the Drummer Boy’, set at the Battle of Waterloo, illustrates this really well.   It’s easy to forget that war, as well as bringing death and destruction, is also a source of business opportunity for some.  Such is the case for our button seller, whose travels through France and Belgium in search of orders for his company’s buttons for military uniforms, brings him to the site of the battle as it rages.  He is confronted by the realities of war; that smart uniforms bearing the correct regimental buttons mean nothing in the face of bullets, sabres and cannon fire and will ultimately end up being valued only by those plundering bodies.

I really loved Beautiful Star & Other Stories and would recommend the collection for any lover of history (I think it might even convert some people who think history is dull) and those for whom the lives of the people who fought in a battle are more interesting than the battle itself.  I really hope Andrew is true to his answer to my final interview question and writes another collection soon.

My grateful thanks to The Dome Press for my review copy, in return for my honest and unbiased review.

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In three words: Fascinating, intimate, thought-provoking

Try something similar…The Path of the King by John Buchan


Andrew SwanstonAbout the Author

Andrew read a little law and a lot of sport at Cambridge University, and held various positions in the book trade, including being a director of Waterstone & Co and Chairman of Methven’s plc, before turning to writing.  Inspired by a lifelong interest in early modern history, his Thomas Hill novels are set during the English Civil War and the early period of the Restoration.  Andrew’s novel Incendium was published in February 2017 and is the first of two thrillers featuring Dr. Christopher Radcliff, an intelligencer for the Earl of Leicester, and is set in 1572 at the time of the massacre of the Huguenots in France.

Connect with Andrew

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Beautiful Star Blog Tour Poster