About this deal
Weight: 258gDimension: 129 x 197 x 26 (mm)ISBN-13: 9781472294913 As Lettie settles in, she's hopeful that her past, and the terrible secret Tommy has come to Foxash to escape, are far behind them. 71 Balham High Road, Balham, SW12 9AP With slow, quiet intent, Kate Worsley builds a tense atmosphere of looming horror. Regular Hours of Operation:Monday-Friday:10am - 4 pm With slow, quiet intent Kate Worsley builds a tense atmosphere of looming horror.
Reviews
lilysmum
There are strange desires, dark passions and jealousies. Lettie and Tommy are mentored by their neighbours and experienced farmers Adam and Jean Dell.
I hadn’t heard of this book, but when Sarah Waters recommended it, I knew I’d have to give it a read. The unemployed miners and labourers identified were moved largely to Essex and Suffolk and trained to set up small holdings. Foxash by Kate WorsleyIf you like a bit of folk horror with your historical fiction, or if you enjoyed Starveacre, that haunting novel by Andrew Michael Hurley, you might really savour this darkly strange story.
One of the crops grown on the small holdings was the so-called ‘miner’s lettuce’, which was used to treat scurvy during the C19th. An uneasy friendship develops and things become quite macabre. In 1934 the Land Settlement Association was established in Britain to lead a ‘back to the land’ movement to improve food security within the country.
The Rapunzel lettuce plays a large part in this novel; the main character is called Lettie and together with her husband Tommy she embarks on a journey to Essex to start a new life after some unexplained incident in their former life prompts them to move. And when the corn dollies appear, well, you know you’re in for a treat.