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For a brief introduction to any of Margaret Dickinson's novels please click on the relevant cover picture

Margaret Dickinson's new novel

 

 

Charlotte is an only child, reared by a domineering father who cannot forgive her for not being the son he desires. Loved by most that she meets, Charlotte has a gift for friendship, and it is her work as a Sunday School teacher that gives her hope – and an escape from home.When Charlotte meets Miles Thornton, she is instantly drawn to him. He is new to the area and a widower, with three young sons to look after, though the one thing he has longed for is a daughter. His youngest son, Georgie, only six, with golden hair and a bright smile, adores Charlotte while his middle brother Ben is shy and quiet, but with a maturity well beyond his twelve years. It is Philip, the sixteen year old, who attracts the interest of Charlotte’s father, who believes he has found at last the son he needs to take over his farm, but recognises that first he must rid himself of the daughter he never wanted.

 

 

 

Signing Events 2010

 

Friday, 5th March                    WHSmith, Skegness                           9.30am - 11.30am

                                                WHSmith, Boston                              2pm -3.30pm

 

Saturday, 6th March                Waterstones, Lincoln                          11am - 1pm

                                                WHSmith, Lincoln                              2pm  3.30pm

 

Sunday, 7th March                   WHSmith, Meadowhall                      11am - 3pm

 

Tuesday, 9th March                 WHSmith, Gainsborough                   10.30am - 12.30

                                                WHSmith, Retford                            2pm - 3pm

 

Wednesday, 10th March          Oldrids, Boston                                 10.30am - 12

                                                Waterstones, Boston                         12.30 - 2pm

 

Friday, 12th March                  WHSmith, Grantham                          10.30am - 12

                                                Downtown, Grantham                        1pm - 3pm

 

Saturday, 13th March              WHSmith, Grimsby                            10.30am - 12

                                                Waterstones, Grimsby                        2pm - 3pm

 

Tuesday, 16th March               Bookmark, Spalding                          10.30am - 1pm

 

Wednesday, 17th March          WHSmith, Louth                                9.30am -11.30am

                                                MSR News                                       12 to 1pm

 

Thursday, 18th March              Perkins, Horncastle                             10am - 11.30am

                                                Coningsby Bookshop                          1pm - 2.30pm

 

Saturday, 20th March              WHSmith, Newark                             10.30am - 12.30pm

 

Monday, 22nd March               Walkers Bookshop, Sleaford              12pm - 2pm

 

Friday, 26th March                  Ollerton Library                                  2 pm  (Talk)

 

Saturday, 27th March              WHSmith, Macclesfield                     10am - 12pm          

 

Saturday, 10th April                WHSmith, Beverley                            11am  1pm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Margaret Dickinson

Born in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Margaret Dickinson has spent most of her life in the county, moving to the East Coast from Nottinghamshire at the age of seven.  She began writing at the age of fourteen with the ambition to be in print and her first novel was published in 1968 when she was twenty-six.  Seven others followed this between 1969 and 1984 but then, because of family commitments, Margaret was unable to write for seven years.  In 1991, encouraged by her husband to begin writing again, Margaret had that little piece of luck that everyone needs - she found a wonderful agent, Darley Anderson, who advised her to write a regional saga with a strong woman as the central character.

 

In 1993 Pan Macmillan offered a two-book contract for Plough the Furrow, the first in the Fleethaven Trilogy, and its sequel, Sow the Seed, which were published in 1994 and 1995 respectively.  It seemed as if Margaret had found her niche; writing romantic fiction and bringing to life her love of the sea, the Lincolnshire landscape and its people.  Reap the Harvest, published in 1996, completed the trilogy.  Church Farm Museum at Skegness - a “living” museum - was the model for Brumbys’ Farm and the setting was Gibraltar Point.

 

In 1997 The Miller’s Daughter, inspired by the windmill at Burgh-le-Marsh, near Skegness, was published and in the following year Chaff Upon the Wind took the Manor House at Alford as the setting for the characters in the story.  Grimsby was the inspiration for The Fisher Lass, evoking the dramas of those who are born to the fishing way of life and described by the publishers as ‘...a love story as powerful and restless as the mighty North Sea.’  This was published in 1999.  Spalding and district was the setting for The Tulip Girl published in August 2000 and The River Folk, inspired by Margaret’s birthplace, Gainsborough, was published on 22nd June 2001. 

 

Tangled Threads, a story with the Nottinghamshire framework knitting and lace industries in the early 1900s as the setting was published in May 2002 and its sequel in 2003, Twisted Strands, followed the lives of the same characters affected by the Great War.  Margaret’s novel for 2004, Red Sky in the Morning, returned to the Lincolnshire Wolds and evoked the era of the Second World War and its aftermath. 

 

The Workhouse Museum at Southwell in Nottinghamshire was the inspiration for Without Sin, published in April 2005.  As always, Margaret’s characters and storylines are completely fictitious, though the background research at the museum was fascinating.

 

Pauper’s Gold, published in April 2006, is an emotional story of love and survival, set in a Derbyshire cotton mill and the silk town of Macclesfield. In the 1850s life was harsh for the pauper apprentices, children taken from workhouses and bound to their masters for years.  And, with the onset of the American civil war, a cotton famine caused greater hardship in the mills of England.

 

Wish Me Luck, published by Macmillan and Pan Books in April 2007, is set in Lincolnshire during World War II.  The shout line on the book cover says it all:  "Love and Laughter, Tears and Courage in a Time of War".

 

Sing As We Go, published in March 2008, again has the Second World War as its setting and is the story of a girl who, after tragedy and heartbreak, joins a concert party to entertain troops, hospitals and war workers.

 

Wherever Margaret travels, she is never “off duty” when it comes to finding ideas for her novels.  On her first-ever trip abroad in 2004 to Davos, in Switzerland, which in the early part of the twentieth century was a centre for the treatment of tuberculosis, Margaret found fascinating information that led to writing Suffragette Girl.  The story begins and ends with the heroine, Florrie, in Davos, but in between she becomes a suffragette, a VAD nurse in the front line in the Great War and even takes part in the General Strike of 1926.

 

Margaret’s novel for 2010, Sons and Daughters, is set in the flat marshland near the Lincolnshire coast; an area with its own unique ‘character’.

                      Charlotte, the heroine in Sons and Daughters, is treated very cruelly by her father, Osbert, who craved a son.  The only love and laughter at home is to be found in the farmhouse kitchen with the servants, Mary and Edward, and with the workmen on her father’s farm.  Though she doesn’t realise it at first, Charlotte is loved by everyone in the small community, especially by the children who attend her Sunday School.

                        It is only when a widower, Miles Thornton, and his three sons come to live at the Manor that Charlotte’s world is turned upside down and she begins to see that her life of duty and obedience to her father is not what it should be.  And then Osbert comes up with a preposterous suggestion that shocks Charlotte and all those who care about her.

 

To celebrate the Millennium, Margaret was invited by the Skegness Playgoers to write a community play.  Embracing Tides, featuring the life of a fictional family throughout the twentieth century in Skegness, was staged at the Embassy Theatre, Skegness, on 23rd, 24th and 25th November, 2000, and also on 1st December as the Playgoers’ entry for that year’s Play Festival.  The production won five of the Festival’s thirteen awards.

 

Margaret still lives in Lincolnshire.  She has been married to Dennis for over forty four years and has two grown-up daughters and is now a proud Grannie.

 

   

Thank you for visiting my website

Best wishes

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Margaret Dickinson

Margaret Dickinson's novels are published in paperback by   Pan Books