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A Step From Cinnamon Alley
A Step From Cinnamon Alley
Oct 26, 2024 12:27 PM

Author:Patricia Burns

A Step From Cinnamon Alley

A magical love story- and a richly detailed evocation of a great city.

1909, and life is hard for young Poppy Powers.

Her dad has disappeared-gone to a season in the North somewhere and failed to return-leaving her mum to earn their keep and Poppy doing chores for Gran. Poppy dreams of being a musician like dad, but Gran would never allow it, and Gran’s rule is absolute in Cinnamon Alley.

There is more than a littleof Gran’s stubbornness and determination in Poppy, however and the discovery of her Dad’s saxophone, secret music lessons and the Salvation Army band bring the stirrings of possibility. Waitressing in the drinking clubs during the terrible Great Was, Poppy and her dreams find a direction. It is there she falls in love, tragically and irrevocably, with the American Scott Warrender.

Alone and destined to rely on her own talents, Poppy, with few loyal friends and a flair for dance music, forms the Power Girls, the first all-female band. The fight for respect and recognition is doubly hard for women, but this is the heady Roaring Twenties and all the Bright Young Things are desperate to dance. Among them is Roddy Ffitch. Charming, rich, madly in love with Poppy, he introduces her to a dangerous world of endless parties and fast cars. But can he help her forget Scott?

From smoky clubs to ocean liners, from North Millwall to New York, though the war, the reckless dancing years and the Wall Street Crash, Poppy is determined to succeed, and to make her own way on her own terms. Only her last ambition remains unfulfilled-to share it all with the man she loves. But, maybe after all, what Poppy craves is just a step from Cinnamon Alley…

Reviews

Plenty of action... sharp dialogue and swift characterisation. The whole is intelligently structured so that this is absorbing and thoughtful as well as tense and exciting

—— Daily Telegraph

A good old-fashined action hero makes his appearance in this page-turning thriller... James Holland, a respected military historian, has produced a story authentic in every detail

—— Daily Telegraph

Scorching, tightly wired... It's a reminder that blood fueds are as old as humanity itself

—— Claire Alfree , Metro

Written with restrained power

—— Kate Saunders , The Times

The first great novel of the war in Afghanistan

—— Wall Street Journal

We watch as the resistance of an isolated American garrison in Afghanistan is ground down, not by force of arms but by the will of a single unarmed woman, holding inflexibly to an idea of what is just and right.

—— JM Coetzee

An important book for our times, in which one woman's determination and refusal to consent set an example of courage and honesty.

—— Giles Foden

The Watch is a powerful tale, courageous both in concept and creation: an ancient tale made modern, passed through different narrators in extraordinary shape-shifting prose that makes this not just an important novel, but a remarkable read.

—— Aminatta Forna

A poignant and important book about one of the defining events of the start of the 21st century; it is devastatingly eloquent and unequivocal about the fact that there is no glory or beauty in war.

—— Fatima Bhutto

A tense, edgy, gripping, important work.

—— Neel Muckherjee

Joydeep Roy-Bhattacharya is my hero among my fellow writers. In a world in which an 'identity kit' is something like a toothbrush - that is, something one cannot do without - he has chosen the most difficult way. He has jettisoned his 'identity kit' in the name of freedom of literary choice, in the name of the freedom of literature.

—— Dubravka Ugresic

Joydeep Roy-Bhattacharya's lyrical and poignant evocation of war is a potent reminder of the murderous futility of our imperial adventures in the Middle East. He captures the raw brutality of industrial warfare, along with its trauma, senselessness, random death and stupidity. His characters, including the soldiers who prosecute the war and the innocents whose lives are maimed and destroyed by it, are consumed alike in the vast orgy of death that sweeps across war zones to extinguish all that is human -- tenderness, compassion,understanding and finally love. He forces us to face the evil we do to others and to ourselves.

—— Chris Hedges, author of NY Times Bestseller War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning

Ours is a time of enduring conflict ... As a soldier and veteran, I want my countrymen and women to understand what they continue to ask their military to endure ... As a person, I want us to remember our common humanity. The Watch confronts all of these without apology ... I applaud it.

—— Captain Richard Sullivan, U.S. Army

A captivating read

—— Sunday Business Post

Originally published in 1971, apparently, Reunion passed me by then but reading it now it certainly packs a punch

—— Guy Pringle , Nudge

A little masterpiece

—— Val Hennessy , Daily Mail

I loved the mood of the book — it’s nostalgic and wistful without being sentimental — and it’s written in a perfectly matter-of-fact way but is done so eloquently the sentences feel as if they’ve been spun from silk. It’s a quick read, too, but it’s the kind of story that stays with you

—— Reading Matters

Devastating

—— Fiona Wilson , The Times

Never hits a false note

—— i (The paper for today)

It’s a good novel, a short novel, quickly and easily read, but it’s a novel that demonstrates Uhlman’s great skill because when you arrive at the last sentence (the very last sentence of the novel), you see you’ve actually missed a different arc entirely. It is this twist in the tail that has you both retreating back through the book but also (curse them) recommending it to others as well

—— Book Munch

Extraordinary…one of literature’s most shattering final sentences

—— New York Times

Uhlman writes with a painter’s eye for the significant detail, and with the precision of someone who has learned a second language in adulthood. Every word is exactly what it must, and could only, be. Every sentence is characterized by delicacy, concision, and finesse

—— Church Times

Shimmers above so much of the new fiction… Brings a lump to the throat in its final line

—— Arifa Akbar , Independent

A daring miracle of narrative simplicity, its end comes at you like a torch in a long tunnel.

—— Rachel Cooke , Observer

As perfect as it is powerful

—— Irish Times

Reunion resembles that other small masterpiece, Death in Venice, by Uhlman’s compatriot Thomas Mann. Its setting may be drastically different but, in a classic, what prevails is strength of spirit over the will to power.

—— Amanda Hopkinson , Jewish Chronicle

[A] touching novel.

—— David Nicholls , Observer, Book of the Year

A beautiful story

—— Jeffrey Archer , Daily Express
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