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Paperback The Hired Man Book

ISBN: 034021807X

ISBN13: 9780340218075

The Hired Man

(Book #1 in the Tallentire Trilogy Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$5.79
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Book Overview

Set in Cumbria and covering the period from 1898 to the early twenties, this is the powerful saga of John Tallentire, first farm labourer, then coal miner, and his wife Emily. John's struggle to break... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Subtle and powerful at the same time

The Hired Hand by Melvyn Bragg is the story of John Tallentire, his wife, Emily, and their families. The novel is set in Cumbria in the north-west of England, starting in the 1890s and following the characters' fortunes until the 1920s. John Tallentire is the hired man. He is a farm labourer who does as he is asked but is rewarded with mere subsistence. He accepts his lot. But then, in an attempt to improve his life, he becomes a coal miner in pits where the workings stretch out under the sea. The First World War comes, and goes, but not without wreaking its own dose of havoc on the family. John lives through attempts at trade union formation. And there is an accident in the coal mine that traps several miners. And so John's life unfolds, working its way towards a goal one feels that he never chose. He is a hired man, a seller of labour in a market that, by definition, undervalues what he does. It is his lot to respond to the demands and commands of others. His own preferences, his own motivation must always be kept firmly of secondary importance because, as a hired man, he has no resources to apply to his own ends until he has satisfied the demands of others. And, inevitably, those demands are as great as his willingness to fulfil them. Consequently, the rewards of his labours are never enough to raise his life above satisfying the needs of today. Emily, his wife, lives a dutiful life alongside him. They marry with their lives ahead of them and Emily makes do, happily, with her lot. The children come - and go, since not all of them survive. Neither do the surviving children seem to have much of a chance of their own to break out of the dependency that is their life. The subtlety of The Hired Man, however, is that this continued dependency is cast in a society that is subject to constant change. It is not tradition, or shackles of rigid social systems that perpetuate poverty. It is the social relationships between different groups that endure, even when social, political and economic structures change. And it is a life that finally exhausts Emily, leaves her but a ghost of her former self. It has been said that working class life in England was nasty, brutish and short. In the Tallentire's household, there is much dignity, only occasional nastiness and little of the brute. But brevity is always a threat. Attempts to form unions, attempts thus at creating some stability and security, are described with great effect. It would perhaps seem self-evident that poor people with little security would embrace those who promised improvement. But Melvyn Bragg's portrayal of the process is subtle, and identifies how the workers' very insecurity can be manipulated to convince them to act against their own interests. There was one aspect of the book that was less than successful. This was the author's attempt to write dialogue in local dialect. Spellings are changed to suggest different intonation and words are invented to capture local usage. Too often,

POIGNANT

A very poignant story of unsettled life of a farmer/miner and his family. Never able to find the right niche. Never able to really enjoy life even when comfortably lodged and fed with a loving wife and children around him. It is presented beautifully, not a maudling account. I would recommend it highly.

A beautiful book

Set in Northern England from c.1880s to the early 1920s, this is a wonderful novel about a rural family--farmers and coal miners--their trials and tribulations. It succeeds so well because of Bragg's writing style: his prose is as hard-chiseled and strong as the people he depicts. He writes with assurance and authority. A joy to read.
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