Ruth Hamilton was one of North West England's most popular writers. She was the bestselling author of twenty-five novels, including Spinning Jenny, The Bells of Scotland Road, Mulligan's Yard, Mersey View and That Liverpool Girl. She was born in Bolton, which is the setting for many of her novels, and spent most of her life in Lancashire.
A Mersey Mile refers to a section of the well-known Scotland Road in Liverpool, due for demolition in the 1950s, and the group of people determined to protest about it . The protest centres around Polly's Parlour, a small, well-patronised cafe, giving the reader the opportunity to meet a varied but largely likeable bunch of characters. Polly herself is fighting her feelings for Frank Charleson, whose late wife had been Polly's best friend. But how can she marry Frank when her twin brother, Cal, is crippled after an accident and needs constant care. The book is full of what I must assume is typical Liverpudlian humour which seems to pride in trading insults. Despite finding that a little wearing after a while, this book is a very satisfying read.