
The Valley: A Hundred Years in the Life of a Yorkshire Family
Richard Benson
'Wonderfully evocative ... Not for a heartbeat is there a false or faltering note as various life stories unfurl and conflate, invariably amid hardship and leading to heartbreak' The Times
The close-knit villages of the Dearne Valley in Yorkshire were home to four generations of the Hollingworth family. Spanning Richard Benson’s great-grandmother Winnie’s ninety-two years in the valley, and drawing on years of historical research, interviews and anecdotes, The Valley lets us into generations of carousing and banter as the family’s attempts to build a better and fairer world for themselves meet sometimes with triumph, sometimes with bitter defeat.
Against a backdrop of underground explosions, strikes and pit closures, these are unflinching, deeply personal stories of battles between the sexes in a man’s world sustained by strong women; of growing up, and the power of love and imagination to transform lives.
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About Richard Benson
Reviews for The Valley: A Hundred Years in the Life of a Yorkshire Family
GQ Magazine
The moving history of four generations of one Yorkshire mining family. Through them emerges the story of 20th century working-class England
Woman & Home
This rare and finely tempered work serves up a devastating combination of memory and imagination ... The Valley is a landmark history
Literary Review
The detail is delivered in a fine poetic rhythm ... Wonderfully evocative ... Not for a heartbeat is there a false or faltering note as various life stories unfurl and conflate, invariably amid hardship and leading to heartbreak
The Times
Could not be more meticulous or magically intimate if it tried … Exquisite, finely worked texture of petit point ... the reader comes to feel he is holding not a book of social history in his hands, but a fat and vivid novel ... The Valley is a masterpiece of empathy and good writing, and I hope that in months to come it will be on the receiving end of a great deal of reciprocal love
Observer
Benson captures the hard graft and constant perils of colliery life with cinematic vividness ... For an unvarnished, well-crafted obituary of the human side of mining, there won’t be anything better than The Valley
Independent
The early sections of The Valley recall the world described by D. H. Lawrence in Sons and Lovers but, with her spirit guides and secret passions, Winnie could have wandered in from the pages of One Hundred Years of Solitude ... The Valley is an extraordinary book about hidden lives
Frances Wilson, Daily Telegraph
Intensely enjoyable
Sunday Times
How many social reports have you read that combine the epic sweep of Gone With The Wind with the microscopic intensity of Tolstoy ... Extraordinary … There is no need for photographs to put a face to the individuals so compellingly captured by Benson
Sunday Express
Fascinating
Daily Express
Vivid
Daily Telegraph
Remarkable ... Benson’s book is a masterpiece of empathetic imagination
Lucy Lethbridge, Financial Times
Benson relates more than the story of a hard land and proud culture; this is a saga about hard-working men and strong-minded women who bolstered one another through the many strikes and struggles of the 20th century
Saga
Epic … Benson captures the hard graft and constant perils of colliery life with cinematic vividness, especially in the set-pieces on mining accidents. For an unvarnished, well-crafted story of the human side of mining, there won’t be anything better than The Valley
Independent
Intensely enjoyable
Sunday Times, Must Reads
I wish I’d written it. Richard Benson’s new book, a sprawling masterpiece chronicling 100 years in the life of one mining family in the Dearne Valley, is social history as it is meant to be. Neither novel nor documentary, it is a compelling hybrid of both
Yorkshire Post