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On a winter night in 1916, inside the sprawling Barnbow munitions factory near Leeds, hundreds of women filed into Room 42 to fill shells for the Western Front. By 10:27 p.m., thirty-five of them would never walk back out. A Penny a Shell follows one day in the lives of three of those women-Eliza Wren, a charge hand carrying the weight of her family's survival; Sarah Jennings, a sharp-tongued farm labourer with a secret she can no longer outrun; and Lucy Atkinson, a timid seventeen-year-old still grieving her brother killed at the Somme. Their paths cross on the factory benches where danger is…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
On a winter night in 1916, inside the sprawling Barnbow munitions factory near Leeds, hundreds of women filed into Room 42 to fill shells for the Western Front. By 10:27 p.m., thirty-five of them would never walk back out. A Penny a Shell follows one day in the lives of three of those women-Eliza Wren, a charge hand carrying the weight of her family's survival; Sarah Jennings, a sharp-tongued farm labourer with a secret she can no longer outrun; and Lucy Atkinson, a timid seventeen-year-old still grieving her brother killed at the Somme. Their paths cross on the factory benches where danger is constant, mistakes are costly, and pressure for output never stops. Across twenty-four hours, the novel traces their working-class lives at home and on the line: the long walks in the dark, the aching exhaustion, the jokes and songs on the train, the quiet fears they never say aloud. Through the grit of industrial wartime Britain-TNT poisoning, relentless shifts, and the unspoken grief carried by women on the home front-the story builds toward the real explosion that devastated Room 42 on 5 December 1916. Meticulously researched and inspired by real testimonies, factory records, and the author's own family history, A Penny a Shell honours the courage, sacrifices, and unseen labour of the women who kept the war machine running. A story of resilience, friendship, and the hidden cost of war-perfect for readers of historical fiction, women's history, and true untold stories.
Autorenporträt
Antony J. Bell is a historical fiction author whose work is deeply rooted in the history and soil of the North of England. Raised in a working-class Yorkshire family, he has always been drawn to the quiet, untold stories of ordinary people caught in the sweep of extraordinary events. His debut novel, A Penny a Shell, is a personal tribute born from a piece of his own family history: the story of his great-grandmother, who was one of the thirty-five women killed in the catastrophic Barnbow munitions factory explosion of 1916. Driven by this deep personal connection, Antony combines meticulous historical research with empathetic storytelling. He seeks to honor the courage, sacrifice, and fierce solidarity of the women on the WWI home front-giving a voice to those who were silenced by history. Antony lives in Yorkshire with his family and is dedicated to uncovering the stories that have been forgotten.