An enchanting and utterly absorbing memoir ‘Full heart & Empty bellies‘ of growing up in the Forest of Dean in the 1920s and 1930s.
Winifred Foley grew up in the 1920s, a bright, determined miner’s daughter – in a world of unspoilt beauty and desperate hardship, in which women were widowed at thirty and children died of starvation. Living hand-to-mouth in a tumbledown cottage in the Forest of Dean, Foley – ‘our Poll’ – had a loving family and the woods and streams of a forest ‘better than heaven’ as a playground.
But a brother and sister were dead in infancy, bread had to be begged from kindly neighbours and she never had a new pair of shoes or a shop-bought doll. And most terrible of all, like her sister before her, at fourteen little Poll had to leave her beloved forest for the city, bound for a life in service among London’s grey terraces.