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Hop, Step and Jump

by Winifred Watson
Persephone book no:

152 153


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The Far Cry
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PREFACE BY ROWAN PELLING
261pp
ISBN 978 1 910263 433

To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Persephone Books edition of much-loved bestseller Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day, we are pleased to publish another neglected novel by Winifred WatsonHop, Step and Jump.

In the beginning, the love story of Jenny Dennet and Bert Murray ran the appointed course of all similar love stories in their neighbourhood. It differed in the end because Jenny had character as well as charm and Bert had only charm.

Jenny wants more. Much more. Born into poverty in a small industrial town in the north of England, she is determined to find a way out. After taking up with Bert, a handsome rotter – ‘the catch of his neighbourhood’ – who works in the same factory as her, it’s not long before she gives in to his pleas to marry him. But he turns out to be a drunk and a philanderer with an occasional propensity to violence and she soon walks out on him (the ‘hop’ of the title). ‘You can’t leave me. Where’ll you go?' asks Bert. ‘I’ve got my hands an’ I’ve got my brains and I can work,’ Jenny replies.

Sure enough, Jenny quickly gets a job as a housemaid. She falls into an affair with her employer’s son, Hugh (the ‘step’), but, finding herself both morally compromised and – even worse – bored, she borrows some money from him to open a bakery (the ‘jump’). But will running her own business be enough to fulfill her? And what about love? Hop, Step and Jump weaves together a number of fascinating themes including female desire, domestic violence, and working-class life in the 1930s.

This spirited tale of upward mobility, written in Winifred Watson’s distinctively direct style, was first published in 1939 in the same week as the outbreak of war. The Guardian described it as ‘unusual and entertaining’ while also lamenting the difficulty of reviewing books just as war was being declared. ‘Subtle and romantic’ was L P Hartley’s verdict in the Observer and, according to the Sketch, ‘Without being hard, Miss Winifred Watson is a matter-of-fact writer and endows her heroine with these qualities. She reminds one a little of Arnold Bennett.’ Certainly, there is an explicitness in Hop, Step and Jump that in some ways makes it more akin to the novel of realism. For example, the impoverished surroundings in which Jenny and her husband Bert have to live are described in great detail, as is the way they are virtually imprisoned because of their circumstances. The novel is brutal at times and doesn’t gloss over squalor or poverty. Yet at the same time, it is extremely entertaining and flows along like the best kind of light fiction, or what is sometimes referred to as a Mills and Boon. 
    
So Hop, Step and Jump should be read on several levels. It is an extremely good read in the romantic novel tradition; it dissects moral values and makes the reader think hard about what is involved in Jenny’s search for freedom and love; and it is fascinating about an ordinary working class woman’s life in 1930s England. As Rowan Pelling writes in her Persephone Preface: ‘What elevates the story is the odyssey through Britain’s social classes, the candidness about sex, and the exploration of female self-determination. Jenny may freely acquiesce to love and erotic adventures, but she evades ownership.’ A seemingly light novel turns out to be curiously radical.

Endpapers

The endpapers for Hop, Step and Jump are ‘Stanford’, a hand-screen printed chintz designed in 1937 by Marion Dorn for Donald Brothers, exhibited in 1939 at the British Industries Fair © Marion Dorn / Victoria and Albert Museum, London. We chose ‘Stanford’ for a number of reasons. It shares some similarities with a Marion Dorn design we used for the endpapers for our other Winifred Watson title, Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day; the brown and yellow work well for a novel set in a northern industrial town where life is tough i.e. it’s not overly pretty or jolly; and the sheaves of wheat in the design recall Jenny's bakery and thus her freedom and independence. Lastly, there is a sentence on p.207 of the book describing Jenny's 'room of one's own' after her friends kindly redecorate it for her: ‘A new easy chair, together with her old one, were both draped in loose cretonne covers of a soft brown background, patterned in dull golds and yellows and sepias and paler browns. New curtains, of the same material, had been hung at the windows.’ Which does rather sound like ‘Stanford’, doesn't it? 

Picture Caption

Movie stars Hedy Lamarr and Charles Boyer, 1938.


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Categories: Adultery Love Story North of England Sex Working Women

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