Flat and Boring There Isn’t It? A celebration of life in the Lincolnshire Fens – New April 2023

Flat and Boring There Isn’t It? A celebration of life in the Lincolnshire Fens by Amanda Pearson will be published by Paul Dickson Books on Monday, April 17, 2023.

Born of a great passion and enthusiasm for the area that Amanda Pearson lives in, and the desire to rid the Fenlands of the negative misconceptions, held by too many, that the area is ‘flat and boring’, this book is a collection of light-hearted prose, amusing anecdotes, illustrative poetry and a selection of Amanda’s beautiful photographs.  Together they bring to life the surroundings, the wildlife, and what it’s like to live out in the Lincolnshire Fens. The aim is to introduce people to a part of the country they may well have otherwise overlooked and to encourage those more local to maybe view the area in a new light.

Amanda Pearson

 

Joseph Crompton: A Journey of Faith – new booklet about Victorian Norwich churchman

Joseph Crompton: A Journey Of Faith

Church historian, Nicholas Groves has uncovered the remarkable ecclesiastical career of Victorian Norwich churchman, Joseph Crompton (1813-1878) in his new booklet, Joseph Crompton: A Journey of Faith. Published by Paul Dickson Books, price £5, one pound from the sale of each booklet will go to The Octagon Chapel.

Crompton’s journey of faith began as a Unitarian minister at The Octagon Chapel, before he branched out and established an independent congregation called the Free Christians, which met at Blackfriars Hall, the former chancel of the Dominican Friary. He then joined the Church of England and ended his career as Rector of St Lawrence, in the wake of Edwin Hillyard’s Ritualist era, which had involved the notorious Father Ignatius and his ‘monks’.

Nicholas Groves explains his interest in Joseph Crompton: “I first encoutered Joseph Crompton when researching for my doctoral thesis, which was on the Ritualist churches of Norwich. The church of St Lawrence was an early (indeed, the second) convert to the Ritualist cause in Norwich, and Crompton became its Rector after a very turbulent period, which involved the notorious ‘Father Ignatius’ (Joseph Leycester Lyne).”

“Looking into his background, I found that he had started out as minister of the Octagon Unitarian Chapel and thought at the time that that was a remarkable change of views. It was not until forced idleness over the summer of 2020 gave me the opportunity that I was able to look further into his life. What I was not to know in 2008 was that I should mirror his journey in reverse, going from St George Tombland, another of the churches that had a Ritualist tradition, to The Octagon. In my case, organ-playing was the catalyst.”

“What the members of The Octagon thought of the goings-on at St Lawrence we can but guess; likewise we can only guess (though probabaly with some degree of accuracy) what St Lawrence’s thought of The Octagon. It takes a degree of fortitude for someone to change thier religious views so much, but to do so in the same city, as a clergyman, even more so. That Joseph Crompton came out of this with goodwill on all sides says much about him.”

Nicholas Groves has been involved with various Norwich churches since 1981. He has taught at both school and university level and is now a freelance writer and lecturer. He is a trustee of the Norwich Historic Churches Trust and of The Octagon Unitarian Chapel, where he also plays the organ.

Joseph Crompton: A Journey of Faith is on sale at Allthingsnorfolk.com, Amazon, Revelation Bookshop Norwich and City Bookshop Norwich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Norfolk Authors, Books and Cake

Paul Dickson Books

Sunday 3 April, 3pm at the Assembly Rooms, Swaffham PE37 7QH.

Hear from Norfolk authors, Peter Sargent, Neil Haverson and Janet Collingsworth and publisher Paul Dickson and enjoy a full afternoon tea, in aid of Norfolk and Waveney Mind.

Peter Sargent is a former EDP  journalist and has written three East Anglian history books, along with My Word!, an explorationm of the origins of our favourite words.

Neil Haverson worked for many years for ECN and Archant and was latterly Editor of Let’s Talk magazine. He has written a memoir, Ink in my Blood about his 50 years in the Norfolk media.

Janet Collingsworth’s book, Tell me about the farm Grandad is a memoir of growing up in 1960s Norfolk.

Paul Dickson is an independent publisher based in Norwich.

Tickets, £20 from Eventbrite or Ceres Bookshop, Swaffham, t. 01760 722504.

 

Tell me about the farm Grandad at Costessey Primary School

Janet Collingsworth with children from Costessey Primary School

Janet Collingsworth visited Costessey Primary School on Monday, December 6 to tell stories from her new book Tell me about the farm Grandad, A 1960s Norfolk childhood. Janet went  to both Costessey Infant and Junior Schools in the 1960s and was back on home territory. Both schools, which were amalgamated into Costessey Primary School, feature in the book. Janet also presented copies of her book for the school library.

 

Tell me about the farm Grandad – new 1960s childhood memoir

Tell Me About The Farm Grandad

Tell me about the farm Grandad, A 1960s Norfolk childhood is a new memoir by Aylsham resident, Janet Collingsworth. The book, price £11, will be published by Norwich-based Paul Dickson Books on Tuesday 5 October.

Born in the late 1950s, Janet grew up in Norwich with her Mum and Dad and younger sister Wendy. In her delightful memoir enjoy the happy times spent with Grandparents in Corpusty exploring the village, learning about the natural world, popping into village shops and post office, meeting village characters and a whole array of Great Aunts and Uncles, who were always good for half-a-crown or a bag of sweets.

There are summer holiday adventures the length and breadth of Great Britain, days out to Yarmouth, picnics in Chapelfield Gardens, rounded off with chocolate misshapes from Caley Macintosh, plus a memorable school trip to Belgium and the mysteries of the 11 Plus.

Explore a  gentler era, with traditional family gatherings for birthdays, Bonfire Night and Christmas, when Harold Wilson’s ‘white heat of technology’ was yet to arrive in Norfolk.

Tell me about the farm Grandad will be on sale at www.allthingsnorfolk.com, Jarrold Norwich, Jarrold Cromer, Not Just Books Thetford,  Waterstones Norwich and Amazon.

 

Book Launch Events, Cry to be Heard! Steven Foyster

Cry to be Heard - Steven Foyster

Steven Foyster’s book, Cry to be Heard! My Road to Recovery, publishes on Friday 10 September

Three book launch events have been arranged – all free to attend. Steven will be reading extracts from his book at each event.

Friday 10 September, 4.30pm to 6pm, Revelation Christian Bookshop, Norwich. To reserve your place, t, 01603 619731, email enquiry@revelation-norwich.co.uk

Friday 24 September, 2.30pm to 4pm, Church of St Mary and St Andrew, Horsham St Faith, Norwich

Friday 8 October, 7pm to 8pm, St Peter Mancroft Church, Norwich – includes talk by Steven Foyster, ‘It’s not the Despair, it’s the Hope; my road to recovery’.

On May 16, 1986, Steven jumped off the top of St Andrew’s Car Park in Norwich, aiming to kill himself. Incredibly he survived. This is the story of the long and hard road to recovery for his battered body and fragile mental health. Steven’s humour and resilience shine through his narrative, as he battles through enormous physical challenges and faces up to the demons that drove him off the car park roof.

On sale from 10 September at Revelation Christian Bookshop Norwich, Jarrold Norwich, Waterstones Norwich and Allthingsnorfolk.com.

Cry to be Heard! by Steven Foyster, publishing 10 September 2021

The next book from Paul Dickson Books, Cry to be Heard! My Road to Recovery by Steven Foyster is publishing on September 10, 2021, rrp £12.

On May 16, 1986, Steven Foyster jumped off the top of St Andrew’s car park in Norwich, aiming to kill himself. Incredibly, he survived. This is the story of the long and hard road to recovery for his battered body and his fragile mental health. Steven’s humour and resilience shines through his narrative, as he battles through enormous physical challenges and faces up to the demons that drove him off the car park roof.

“All of life is here – and that includes death and eternity – so that contradictions become tenable paradoxes and darkness gives way to light. It may well make you weep, but it will also make you smile or even laugh out loud.” Brian Thorne, Emeritus Professor, University of East Anglia and Co-founder, the Norwich Centre.

‘No ‘Shazam-Boom-God-healed-me,’ then. No! Steven’s infectious tale reveals how ordinary everyday, lived, beneath the radar, lower case faith, hope and love combined to bring healing.” Reverend Richard Woodham.

£1 from the sale of every copy of Cry to be Heard! will be donated to Norfolk and Waveney MIND 

A Moment in Time – the plague years

A Moment In Time

In 2017 I published A Moment in Time, the first of Peter Sargent’s East Anglian history books. Subsequently A Place in History (2018) and Anglian Annals (2019) were published. Each book features 50 stories from Norfolk and Suffolk’s past. Sometimes Peter strays over the  Cambridgeshire and Essex and includes items from there as well.

Over the last year, we have had to get used to living with the Covid-19 pandemic. But now we have a brighter life on the horizon thanks to the various vaccines created and distributed in record time.

In A Moment in Time, Peter reflected on the Black Death in Norfolk. I’ve included the story in full, so you can see how our medieval, 16th and 17th century ancestors coped with their pandemic.

The Plague Years by Peter Sargent

“There is great death in Norwich, and in other borough towns in Norfolk, for I assure you that it is the most universal death that I ever knew in England.”

Not another war?

Worse. Much, much worse. The plague. This letter of 1471 from Margaret Paston to her son in London illustrates the great fear of town dwellers for more than three cernturies. Plague – the catchall term for the epidemic diseases that ravaged Europe. In 1348-49 the Balck Death killed up to a quarter of the population of Europe. More than 25 million people are believed to have perished in this first, and most deadly, outbreak of bubonic plague. Within a year or so it disappeared only to break out again for the next 300 years.

What is bubonic plague?

It got its name from the painful, swollen lymph nodes, called buboes, which appeared on sufferers’ bodies, frequently in the groin area. Dried blood under the skin turned black. After its onset death came to seven in 10 of those affected within two or three days. It was an awful death. Nobody knew what caused it. We think now that the infectious fever is caused by the bacillus Yersinia pestis transmitted to humans by rat fleas. At a time when people lived close to animals in unhygienic conditions, it was easy for the fleas to find a human host. Contemporaries blamed the plague on moral corruption, and looked for convenient scapegoats. It was thought too much exercise, too much sex or taking hot baths caused disease. Others thought it was spread by miasmas – poisons in the air.

What happened in East Anglia?

The first outbreak was on the south coast of England in August, 1348. It followed trade routes, spreading throughout the country. In Norwich they sought shelter behind their walls, but walls do not keep rats out. The 18th centiury historian, Francis Blomefield reported that it reached the city on January 1, 1349. No accurate records were kept of how many people died. Blomefield calculated it at 57,304 people, but that seems far too high a figure. Recent estimates indicate that out of a population, which may have been as high as 25,000 in 1348, as few as 6,000 survived, or were still living in the city, 20 years later. Two thirds of the clergy died and only one in three market stalls were occupied the next year. The dead were piled high in carts and buried in communal pits in the Cathedral Close. Others were buried in nearby St George Tombland churchyard. It is said the graveyards there had to be raised to cram in the bodies. In Lynn almost half the population died in 1349. Yarmouth was devasted. In its crowded Rows two thirds of the population perished, and construction of the town’s walls stalled for lack of workers. Economic life ground to a standstill, and some people abandoned their families when they became contaminated. Work abruptly stopped at Norwich Cathedral cloisters on June 25, 1349, according to ecclesiastical records, and did not restart until 1355.

But life went on…

Eventually the country recovered, though the reduction in population had a long term impact, and the psychological scars must have been deep indeed. Plague returned with varying virulence. People tended to lump bubonic plague in with other epidemics, such as the mysterious sweating sickness that claimed lives in the 1530s, typhus, smallpox, syphilis and all the other nasty ways you could die. Later outbreaks tended to hit towns and ports most severely, so places like Norwich, Yarmouth, Ipswich and Lynn were at risk. Poorer areas with the worst sanitation suffered, prompting the authorities to clamp down, blaming poverty for disease. The plague returned every 10 years or so until the next great outbreak. In 1578 Norwich celebrated the visit of Queen Elizabeth I. She had stayed in the city along with an entourage some 2000 strong. Soon after their departure that September, the worst plague epidemic since the 1340s arrived. This time there were officially 4,800 victims in Norwich, though the real number could have been twice that. The old pits were re-opened for mass burials. The city authorities ordered that contaminated houses should be isolated. They were locked and bolted from the outside, windows boarded up and red crosses painted on the doors. Sometimes the occupants survived. Most of the time the bodies were left until bailiffs had found somewhere for them to be buried. In one episode people in a quarantined house turned to cannabalism. The ghost of a young woman, which is said to appear in Tombland, is apparently that of a 1578 victim.

Some cheerful news please…

Well…you were a bit safer in the countryside. Richer people were able to leave town when the plague struck. The only thing that seemed to stop it was a destructive fire. Gradually people made the connection between overcrowded towns, dirty conditions and disease. Norwich suffered again in 1603 and 1625 so, when news of plague in London reached Norfolk in September, 1665, everyone held their breath. Ships from Yarmouth were turned away from the city walls, but the death toll grew. By the time it subsided in 1667 nearly 3000 people had died. This was the last outbreak of the bubonic plague in Britain. It disappeared as mysteriously as it had arrived.

Peter Sargent’s A Moment in Time, 50 stories that bring East Anglian history to life is on sale at Allthingsnorfolk, click here