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	<title>McGrath, Melanie &#8211; The Bell Bookshop</title>
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	<title>McGrath, Melanie &#8211; The Bell Bookshop</title>
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		<title>Silvertown</title>
		<link>https://www.bellbookshop.co.uk/product/silvertown/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Emma]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Feb 2003 00:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Melanie McGrath's critically acclaimed East End family memoir now in paperback.</p>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Melanie McGrath&#8217;s critically acclaimed East End family memoir now in paperback.</p>
<p>In this remarkable book, award-winning writer Melanie McGrath has given us a vivid and poignant memoir of the East End. McGrath spent years wondering about her East End roots. At the turn of the twenty-first century the places where her grandparents lived out their lives Poplar, East Ham and Silvertown &#8211; are virtually unrecognisable; her grandparents, Jenny and Len Page, long since dead and already half forgotten.</p>
<p>Silvertown teems with stories of life in the docks and pubs and dog tracks of the old East End where Melanie McGrath&#8217;s grandparents scraped a living. Here are the bustling alleys and lanes of Poplar in 1914, where eleven year old Jenny watches the men go off to fight; the Moses sweatshop on the Mile End Waste; the London docks, then the largest port in the world; and Jenny having her teeth pulled out on her seventeenth birthday. Here too is the Cosy Café, opened full of hope by Jenny and Len &#8211; later a home to their troubled marriage &#8211; and an East End landscape which is altered forever by the closure of the docks and the disintegration of this close knit community.</p>
<p>The places Melanie McGrath describes have largely vanished now. This evocative and deeply moving family memoir recreates the lost East End and the struggles of those who live there.</p>
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