NEW WORK IN PROGRESS…
YESTERMORROW
A futuristic novel about climate change.
Thesis: Our extravagant life-styles and economic systems built on growth are totally
unsustainable in a finite world. Since the industrial revolution our global behaviour
has increasingly hastened the warming of the planet and corresponding cataclysmic
changes in the earth’s future climate.
Setting: The story of an extended family, the Whiteoaks who are members of a
transition movement. They move between Devon and middle-Britain.
Timescale: 2066 towards 2100
Message: When planning for our futures, we can learn from our past.
and
DAYBREAK AT ORCOMBE
Collected Poems by Noel Harrower, including Devon Poems, Heartland Poems and
the long poem A WALK THROUGH TIME, together with some Poems of Pain and
light verse and performance poetry.
© Noel Harrower 2018
Nottingham Post review of “Uncivil War”
Fictional tale puts children at heart of
monumental period
NOEL
Harrower
will
be
a
name
familiar
to
many
Bygones
readers.
He
spent
most
of
his
working
life
as
a
Career’s
Officer
in
Nottinghamshire
and
won
several
awards
for
his
one-act
plays.
Now,
he’s
written
a
fascinating
novel
about
five
fictitious
Nottinghamshire
children,
whose
lives
are
torn
apart
by
the
English
Civil
War.
Tom
is
a
stable
boy
for
John
Hutchinson,
owner
of
Owthorpe
Manor,
who
later
became
the
Parliamentary
Governor
of
Nottingham
Castle.
He
was
one
of
the
commissioners
who
signed
of
King
Charles
I’s
death
warrant.
Tom’s
sister
Meg
is
a
maidservant
at
Pierrepont
Hall.
Her
friend
Nick
is
a
trainee
footman
who
never
wanted
to
be
a
soldier,
while
Jed
takes
the
King’s
shilling
and
serves
in
both
armies
but
later
regrets
it.
The
fifth
child
in
the
saga
is
Alice,
who
is
left
to
help
run
a
refuge
for
victims.
The
novel’s
twin
tales
cover
the
period
from
the
outset
of
the
war,
following
the
raising
of
the
King’s
Standard
at
Nottingham
Castle
in
1642
through
to
1646,
when
King
Charles
surrendered
to
the
Scottish
army
outside
Newark.
Seen
through
the
eyes
of
innocent
children,
Uncivil
War
depicts
the
characters’
initial
excitement
at
the
thought
of
conflict.
Later,
they
come
to
hate
the
war
through
life-changing
experiences
and
question
whether
it
ever
needed
to
have
happened.
The
author,
pictured,
dedicates
the
book
to
the
countless
thousands
of
child
soldiers
across
the
world
and
through
all
the
ages.
He
says:
“Yesterday’s
happenings
provide
insights
into
human
nature,
which
we
can
learn
from.
Sadly,
lessons
are
seldom
learnt.
“Civil
wars
are
usually
the
most
cruel
of
all,
splitting
families
and
neighbours.
“In
my
book,
this
is
seen
in
the
Pierrepont
family
and
also
in
the
tensions
between
Tom
and
Meg.
Members
of
these
families
are
seen
to
come
together
at
the
end.
“Compassion
and
resistance
to
the
war
is
shown
by
Elizabeth
Drury
and
her
young
daughter,
Alice,
who
learns
from
her
example.
“Meg
and
Nick
show
great
courage
when
the
plague
hits
Newark
at
the
height
of
the
third
siege.
“Although
these
characters
are
fictitious,
there
were
real
people
in
Nottinghamshire
who
behaved
in
this
way.
In
our
own
time,
we
hear
about
such
happenings
.
.
.
“Hopefully,
my
book
is
relevant
for
our
time.
“My
aim
was
to
replace
the
concept
of
picturesque
Cavaliers
and
godly
Roundheads
with
recognisable
individuals,
whom
we
might
meet
in
the
high
street
today.”
Noel,
who
now
lives
in
Devon,
recalls:
“When
I
arrived
in
Nottingham,
my
office
was
within
a
stone’s
throw
of
a
plaque
on
a
wall
announcing
that
this
was
the
spot
where
King
Charles
1st
raised
his
standard
in
1642.
“I
went
to
the
library
and
read
Wood’s
History
Of
The
Civil
War
In
Nottinghamshire.
This
led
me
to
join
an
adult
education
course
on
the
subject,
run
by
Nottingham
University.
“My
attention
was
caught
by
the
fact
that
Lucy
Hutchinson
had
written
her
own
account
of
the
war
in
which
her
husband
had
held
the
post
of
governor
of
Nottingham
Castle.
“I
bought
a
copy
of
her
book
from
a
second-hand
dealer
and
discovered
that
she
was
a
strong-minded
woman,
judgemental
but
brave.
I
was
hooked
on
the
subject.”
He
resolved
to
put
the
children
centre
stage,
and
as
it
unfolded,
it
became
two
separate
tales
of
a
brother
and
sister
who
leave
the
family
farmstead
to
work
in
grand
houses
in
Nottinghamshire.
As
a
boy
growing
up
in
the
Second
World
War,
Noel
loved
historical
adventures
stories,
especially
The
Children
Of
The
Forest,
by
Captain
Marriott.
Now
he’s
written
an
engaging,
action-packed
story
that
brings
history
to
life,
in
Uncivil
War,
Twin
Tales
From
Nottinghamshire,
by
Noel Harrower, is published by Troubador at £8.99
From The Nottingham Post of February 29th 2016
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