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Evacuees and Crabapple Trees

Sheila Newberry

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      One last cough from the overheated engine of the Morris 8 and the bulging doors appeared to burst at the seams, with children tumbling eagerly out and dispersing in all directions - rushing past the shabby old weather boarded cottage into the tangled orchard and, with joyous whoops, discovering the gnarled plum trees groaning under the weight of huge, glistening purple-red Victorias. At the outbreak of World War II seven-year-old Sheila and her family left London to take refuge in Suffolk. For a city girl life was strange at first, but roaming the fields and picking wildflowers was what childhood dreams were made of. When the bombing died down, the family moved back to London, but Sheila would later return to the countryside when she, her husband John and their children arrived at Crabapple Cottage, their new home in Kent. Over the next few years, they had many adventures as they adapted to the seasonal rhythms of country life. Sheila Newberry spent her whole life writing but it was not until she was in her 80s that she became one of the country's best-loved saga authors. Evacuees and Crabapple Trees gives readers a wonderful snapshot of her life, from her time as an evacuee to falling in love and raising her children. Throughout all of this Sheila was writing stories, which are loved by readers to this day.With a foreword by Rosie Goodwin.
      CONTRIBUTORS: Sheila Newberry EAN: 9781804185490 COUNTRY: United Kingdom PAGES: WEIGHT: HEIGHT: 198 cm
      PUBLISHED BY: Bonnier Books Ltd DATE PUBLISHED: CITY: GENRE: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Memoirs, FICTION / Sagas, FICTION / Historical / 20th Century / World War II & Holocaust, HISTORY / Social History WIDTH: 129 cm SPINE:

      Book Themes:

      Memoirs, Saga fiction (family / generational sagas), Social and cultural history
      One last cough from the overheated engine of the Morris 8 and the bulging doors appeared to burst at the seams, with children tumbling eagerly out and dispersing in all directions - rushing past the shabby old weather boarded cottage into the tangled orchard and, with joyous whoops, discovering the gnarled plum trees groaning under the weight of huge, glistening purple-red Victorias. At the outbreak of World War II seven-year-old Sheila and her family left London to take refuge in Suffolk. For a city girl life was strange at first, but roaming the fields and picking wildflowers was what childhood dreams were made of. When the bombing died down, the family moved back to London, but Sheila would later return to the countryside when she, her husband John and their children arrived at Crabapple Cottage, their new home in Kent. Over the next few years, they had many adventures as they adapted to the seasonal rhythms of country life. Sheila Newberry spent her whole life writing but it was not until she was in her 80s that she became one of the country's best-loved saga authors. Evacuees and Crabapple Trees gives readers a wonderful snapshot of her life, from her time as an evacuee to falling in love and raising her children. Throughout all of this Sheila was writing stories, which are loved by readers to this day.With a foreword by Rosie Goodwin.
      CONTRIBUTORS: Sheila Newberry EAN: 9781804185490 COUNTRY: United Kingdom PAGES: WEIGHT: HEIGHT: 198 cm
      PUBLISHED BY: Bonnier Books Ltd DATE PUBLISHED: CITY: GENRE: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Memoirs, FICTION / Sagas, FICTION / Historical / 20th Century / World War II & Holocaust, HISTORY / Social History WIDTH: 129 cm SPINE:

      Book Themes:

      Memoirs, Saga fiction (family / generational sagas), Social and cultural history

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      Sheila Newberry was born in Suffolk and spent a lot of time there both before and during the war. She wrote her first 'book' before she was ten - all sixty pages of it - in purple ink. Her family was certainly her inspiration and she was published for most of her adult life. She spent forty years living in Kent with her husband John on a smallholding. She had nine children, twenty-two grandchildren and twelve great-grandchildren. Sheila retired back to Suffolk where she lived until she passed away in 2020.

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