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The Tower Family

The Toppling Towers

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Vintage hardcover novel

160 pages, Hardcover

Published January 1, 1969

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About the author

Barbara Willard

99 books24 followers
Barbara Mary Willard was a British novelist best known for children's historical fiction. Her "Mantlemass Chronicles" is a family saga set in 15th to 17th-century England. For one chronicle, The Iron Lily (1973), she won the annual Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, a book award judged by panel of British children's writers.
Willard was born in Brighton, Sussex on 12 March 1909, the daughter of the Shakespearean actor Edmund Willard and Mabel Theresa Tebbs. She was also the great-niece of Victorian-era actor Edward Smith Willard. The young Willard was educated at a convent school in Southampton.
Because of her family connections, Willard originally went on the stage as an actress and also worked as a playreader, but she was unsuccessful and abandoned acting in her early twenties. She wrote numerous books for adults before she turned to children's literature.
Very little about the author was written during her lifetime, because of her private nature. She died at a nursing home in Wivelsfield Green, East Sussex, on 18 February 1994.
The Grove of Green Holly (1967), which was a story about a group of 17th century travelling players who were hiding in a forest in Sussex from Oliver Cromwell's soldiers, spawned her most famous work, the Mantlemass series (1970–1981) including her Guardian Prize-winning book. Some other books were Hetty (1956), Storm from the West (1963), Three and One to Carry (1964), and Charity at Home (1965).
One of her last books, The Forest - Ashdown in East Sussex, published by Sweethaws Press in 1989, gives a detailed account of Ashdown Forest. In the introduction to the book, Christopher Milne notes that Willard had moved from her home on the Sussex Downs to the edge of Ashdown Forest in 1956 and that her new surroundings had provided the inspiration and setting for ten of her children's historical novels (eight in the Mantlemass series and two others). It is evident by her own account in her book that she actively involved herself in the affairs of the forest. She was a representative of the forest Commoners elected to the forest's Board of Conservators in 1975, and she remained in that capacity for ten years. She tells how she was later heavily involved in the fundraising campaign which enabled East Sussex County Council to purchase the forest in 1988, enabling it to remain as a place of beauty and tranquility open to the public.

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
7 reviews
November 25, 2021
The immediate sequel to The Family Tower. In that first book, along with the story of the family, there were changes and some hard questions about the future. Now the future is here, and the young Towers and their parents have to cope as best they can. The much-anticipated visit of Emily Tower's friend Kojo Amponsah from Ghana works out rather differently than expected, and the hostile take-over of the family firm also leads to the first signs of industrial unrest and racial prejudice among the workforce.

The family continues to evolve, of course, as families do. One of the cousins comes back to the fold, Emily becomes a closer member of the family, and (in some rather subtly-written passages) 2nd cousins Jo Tower and Oliver Evens gradually realise that they do have a particularly special relationship. Some of the problems are resolved, and Jo ends the book by saying that it's a happy ending. But Barbara Willard wasn't one for fairy-tale endings, and I would say that this book has a hopeful ending rather than a happy one.
Displaying 1 of 1 review