Love on the Dole
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Good review of 1930s
Review date: 2008-10-12 Rating: 6 out of 10
This was on my reading list for university, and I am glad I picked it.
Synopsis:
In Hanky Park, near Salford, Harry and Sally Hardcastle grow up in a society preoccupied with grinding poverty, exploited by bookies and pawnbroker, bullied by petty officials and living in constant fear of the dole queue and the Means Test. His love affair with a local girl ends in a shotgun marriage, and, disowned by his family, Harry is tempted by crime. Sally, meanwhile, falls in love with Larry Meath, a self-educated Marxist. But Larry is a sick man and there are other more powerful rivals for her affection. The definitive deception of a northern town in the midst of the thirties' depression. Walter Greenwood's "Love on the Dole" was the first novel to be set against a background of mass unemployment and was instantly recognised as a classic when it was first published in 1933. Raw, violent and powerful, it was a cry of outrage that stirred the national conscience in the same way as the Jarrow march.
This is a very graphic look at life in the Industrial North in the 1930s. This was a time where Britain was suffering in the Depression with unemployment, the dole and Means Testing, poverty, poor living conditions and very little money. Love on the Dole is a great depiction of this; written in the '30s, Greenwood holds nothing back. We see unemployment, the new role of women, leisure activities, poverty, humiliation and love. This has set an accurate image in my mind of the 1930s.
I liked the character of Sally, she was a headstrong, independent girl who knew what she wanted, which was a new identity for women. She was pursued by many men, two of whom I despised! This pleases me because it means I made a strong connection with the book.
Harry on the other hand, he annoyed me some what. He sulked and whinged a lot, however this is probably quite an accurate portrayal of the effect the Depression had on ordinary people.
I enjoyed this novel. It was a good story as well as an excellent historical source.
7/10
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Reviews
Love on the DoleReview date: 2007-07-23 Rating: 8 out of 10Written in the 1930s, this is a classic tale of the oppressed masses. Greenwood weaves his tale starting with the unsullied hope and enthusiasm of youth, gradually eroded into the pessimism brought by a relentless scrape to survive.
The message of this book is subtly ambiguous, suggesting happily ever after but also weighing heavily the cost of that ending, both in life and ideology.
Greenwood writes of an ongoing struggle, as pertinent today as it was in the 1930s. He writes of the struggle itself and of the impact on the ordinary person and not of what should be done. This latter is left for the reader to ponder.not the best editionReview date: 2006-11-13 Rating: 6 out of 10The book is wonderful and should be read. Unfortunately the Vintage edition omits the epigraphs at the beginning which indicate the novel's revolutionary analysis of society. Students buying this edition need to find an older edition and photocopy the relevant page - or, better still, look for a second-hand Penguin copy instead.An excellent edition of a fab play!Review date: 2003-05-19 Rating: 10 out of 10The best edition of "Love on the Dole" I've found, unless you're studying it for school. This is an actors edition- no commentry, no questions, nothing to think about- just the play.Dialect has been toned down- excellent for those who have trouble understanding northern dialects.
It truely is a great play. Shame its not performed much anymore, but read it and you will be moved. A great bunch of characters- fun to play and to watch. Get this play, enjoy it and convince someone you know to stage it! Don't let it disappear into the dark- or into the relm of plays only studied by schools!
Gritty realism from depression era SalfordReview date: 2001-03-05 Rating: 10 out of 10Love on the Dole, published in 1933, was Walter Greenwood's first novel and has never been out of print since. Written on scraps of paper as he tramped the streets looking for work, it has since been made into a film, a play and a musical. Set in Hanky Park, a fictional area of Salford during the depression, the novel was the literary bombshell of its day and the prototype for the 'kitchen sink' school of writing. The gritty realism he depicts of clogged rows of back-to-back houses, pawnshops, gas lights and debt, louse ridden people reveals Greenwoods's burning desire to document the social injustices of the time. He is probably the only English novelist since Dickens who was able to combine true mass appeal with passionate radicalism and bitterly honest documentation with writing of high artistic quality. What makes this book a classic, however, is that simple but elusive art of telling a good story and getting the characters right. The book combines personal documentation and outrage with storylines and situations that belong to the novels of the romantic era. Harry and Sally Hardcastle are growing up in grinding poverty but Sally sees a way out by taking up with local crook Sam Grundy. This beauty and the beast relationship is interwoven with that of Larry Meath, our gallant but doomed hero. Everyone who passes in and out of the storyline, from pawnbrokers to petty officials, are all described in convincing everyday detail and all display universal attitudes and fundamental choices. In Love on the Dole, Walter Greenwood eloquently and amusingly depicts an era that is alien to us today. But in our society of mass consumerism and full supermarket shelves it is too easy to forget that not that long ago people did not even have the means to feed themselves. These injustices should not be forgotten and the book should be required reading for all schoolchildren.
Product Details/Specifications
Authors:
Walter Greenwood
Recording label: Vintage Manufacturer: VintageEAN: 9780099224815Binding: PaperbackISBN: 009922481XNumber of pages: 256Publication date: 1993-06-17Language: English (Original Language)
Language: English (Unknown)