Based on the true story of the biggest civilian tragedy of the Great War, Canary Child is a supernatural mystery drama, at times tragic, yet immensely humorous
In 1968, in a small Nottinghamshire country churchyard, an embittered divorcée has a strange encounter with the apparition of a girl who claims to have died in an explosion at a nearby First World War shell-filling factory fifty years before. Unable to dismiss from her mind the girls desperate plea for help, Dorothy Younger begins her search for further details surrounding the events leading to the girls death, in the hope of finding the child left orphaned by the blast.
Enlisting the help of veteran army officer Tim Mildmay, together they learn of one of the greatest wartime civilian tragedies, which claimed the lives of almost 140 workers. Dorothy and Tim grapple with the mystery of a young woman who apparently died in the explosion, but who was never officially there, and the survival of another who should have been blown to pieces, but was later discovered safely at home.
Of those who died in the tragedy, there were no doubt many tales which could have been told of their lives and the events which led to their last, fatal, few moments on earth. Perhaps this is one of them.
Praise for Canary Child
This absorbing tale, based on a tragic explosion in Nottinghamshire during the Great War, had me rushing to Attenborough churchyard to pay my respects at the gravesides. John Holmes, BBC Nottingham
An unravelling mystery mixed with an incredible real war story and some cracking Nottingham dialect. And, always a good thing, a bit of love. Its a powerful mix. William Ivory, screen writer
Genre: Mystery
In 1968, in a small Nottinghamshire country churchyard, an embittered divorcée has a strange encounter with the apparition of a girl who claims to have died in an explosion at a nearby First World War shell-filling factory fifty years before. Unable to dismiss from her mind the girls desperate plea for help, Dorothy Younger begins her search for further details surrounding the events leading to the girls death, in the hope of finding the child left orphaned by the blast.
Enlisting the help of veteran army officer Tim Mildmay, together they learn of one of the greatest wartime civilian tragedies, which claimed the lives of almost 140 workers. Dorothy and Tim grapple with the mystery of a young woman who apparently died in the explosion, but who was never officially there, and the survival of another who should have been blown to pieces, but was later discovered safely at home.
Of those who died in the tragedy, there were no doubt many tales which could have been told of their lives and the events which led to their last, fatal, few moments on earth. Perhaps this is one of them.
Praise for Canary Child
This absorbing tale, based on a tragic explosion in Nottinghamshire during the Great War, had me rushing to Attenborough churchyard to pay my respects at the gravesides. John Holmes, BBC Nottingham
An unravelling mystery mixed with an incredible real war story and some cracking Nottingham dialect. And, always a good thing, a bit of love. Its a powerful mix. William Ivory, screen writer
Genre: Mystery
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