I really enjoyed this book, in fact, it left enough of an impression that I’m actually writing something that half resembles a review, which is normally not my strongest point…
Woman of Iron or Tilthammer by Sheila Lancaster/ Sheila Holland is set in the late 18th century around rural Birmingham, the story follows Hannah Noble, the illegitimate daughter of an iron master. Her mother, schoolmaster’s daughter, threw aside convention and became Shield’s mistress. After her death, Hannah ends up working as a servant at Shields House under the cold, watchful eye of the iron master’s wife Mary Shields. Mary hated Hannah’s mother, and now she’s making Hannah’s life miserable. Her husband, who is also Hannah’s uncle, is too weak to step in, letting his wife abuse Hannah just to keep the peace at home.
The Shield ironworks pretty much rules the whole district, and the tension in the forge, in the household, and even in the nearby Manor House run parallel all through the book.
Hannah is the heroine that made this book a success for me, she is intelligent, tough, and determined. She’s the only one who truly sees through Joss’s ruthless ambition and constantly calls him out, provoking him and reminding him that he can’t control her. He detests her for it, yet he also loves her, and that love feels like a weakness he doesn’t want but can’t shake, leaving him obsessed with Hannah.
Joss is a manager at the ironworks, tough man, who embodies ruthless ambition with moral values that easily bend to his goals. He despises weakness, and his credo is that only the strongest survive. I hated him for the most of the book and strangely not because of his mistreatment of Hannah (she could always stand up to him) but because of how he treated people who were kinder, weaker, less ruthless than him, Jabey in particular. But, I’ll give him a credit where it’s due, because Joss is always clear and transparent in his need to dominate and succeed. He doesn’t prevaricate and often speak the hard truths others won’t. For example, when he tells Hannah that it wasn’t him who destroyed Nancy but her husband, whose kindness exposed her true rotten nature, it was harsh but true.
I feel it’s necessary to add that there’s a lot of Joss sleeping around and not caring about the offsprings he leaves behind. Although cheating is a big no for me, strangely it wasn’t a major issue here. Of course, he was despicable, but it was all part of his personality and meant nothing to him, he simply took what he could when he couldn’t have Hannah. In his own words: “When I am hungry, I eat.”
The book is packed with tension. While Hannah and Joss are at the center, the supporting cast is always at boiling point too. There’s rape, murder, infidelity, household drama, clashes between Joss and the workers at the iron mill, his ongoing hostility with Jabey, Hannah’s childhood friend who is also in love with her. It all makes for a very intense read.
I wouldn’t call it a romance, more historical women’s fiction (if there is such a thing 🤔). For me, it was a hint of Thomas Hardy, a large helping of Catherine Cookson with a special Charlotte Lamb twist. I want more ….📚