Emotions are running high, with Blackshirts marching through the streets and the Jewish community under threat. Jessie find it alarming, particularly as her boyfriend is Jewish, but there is more to worry her. Her mother, Rose, is reluctant to reveal the past, and then there's Emmie and Hannah.
Sally Worboyes was born and grew up in Stepney with four brothers and a sister, and she brings some of the raw history of her own family background to her East End sagas. She now lives in Norfolk with her husband, with whom she has three grown-up children. She has written several plays which have been broadcast on Anglia Television and Radio Four. She also adapted her own play and novel, WILD HOPS, as a musical, The Hop Pickers.
Down Stepney Way is a well-written story taking place in England in the years prior to the start of World War II. It is a story of family and family secrets, focusing on a young girl Jessie, her family, and her interactions with friends, neighbors, the community, and developing romance. It shows the lives of people living in the shadow of war, and how people coped with rising tensions in the community from groups stirring up strife and dissent. But more than that, we are exposed to the inner workings of families, the ups and downs, the bitterness, and the kindnesses. The story is good. We see family exposed, and the effects and consequences of decisions made years previously. Overall, I enjoyed reading the story. It is not always a happy story, but neither is life in general. My only negative comment was that for me it got confusing at times with all the various family and non-family members and their relationships with one another. I recommend this book to readers.
Really enjoyed this book, but it really needs proof reading. Spelling mistakes and words that don't mean anything to the context of the story. It's a shame because if you can get past that really good story. The author's do an amazing job only to be let down by editors. Thank you Sally for a enjoyable read
Liked the story of Jessie and Dolly, her younger sister, as well as Hannah who is connected to them. I liked the difference in values that ran throughout the story. It was interesting and entertaining, with characters who rang true to that era.