Cabin Fever was the first book BWL published for me. I'd had other books published elsewhere over the years, but making long distance friends with Jude, who started BWL, and is and will remain much missed following her recent sudden death, felt like coming home.
Cabin Fever, as is clear from the cover, is a cruise ship romance with many a mishap along the way. It has proved to be a favourite with many readers and it is also now available as a listening book on Audible. All good, but not as good as the true tale below.
I live in a small town of approximately 25,000 people that, until relatively recently, was a village of about 6,000! Indeed the main street is still referred to as the Village Centre, and it has an atmosphere to match. People are friendly and helpful, dogs are welcome everywhere (even in clothes shops!) and in the good weather the pavement cafes are full. Its history can be traced back thousands of years to when the Vikings 'invaded' with many local names having Viking roots. I've put invaded in inverted commas because the invasion seems to have been no more than the norsemen setting up homesteads, marrying into the local population and making a living by farming and fishing.
For the next few thousand years, that was all there was. That and shipwrecks, because the 'village' is on the North West coast of the UK, facing the Irish Sea. And just a bit further down the coast is Liverpool Bay and Liverpool Docks. In the winter the sea can be stormy and uninviting and the skeletons of a few of the ships that were sailing into the port in treacherous weather can still be seen poking out of the sea bed at low tide. How many perished over many years is unknown but by the 1700s there were so many that eventually the Liverpool Dock Master decided something had to be done about it.
Now as I've said, Formby (Fornebei in its original old Viking/Norse) was a tiny insignificant village. Looking into its past history I'm not sure it can even be called a village as it was more a scattering of farms surrounded by fields and woodland. It did, however, have pretensions! So in 1776 it became the home of the first lifeboat station in the world!
How many lives the brave lifeboatmen (and they were all men in those days) saved between 1776 and 1916 when it closed, is unknown. Nowadays all that can be seen of what for 150 years was a very active lifeboat station is a pile of stones in the sand, and a small plaque. Formby Village, however, is not going to let its 250th anniversary go by without celebrating it. From 26-28 June there will be concerts, a gospel choir, live music and entertainment in the village, sea creatures, mermaids and King Neptune, and Lifeboat displays. Then, on the final day, there will be a service of thanksgiving led by a former Royal Navy chaplain, followed by a community concert compered by a TV presenter in one of the two local parks. It promises to be a fun weekend, especially for the families with young children who will be able to see a lifeboat up close, as well as having ice cream and their faces painted to, no doubt, a nautical theme.
Everything is free and Formby is gearing up for some fun. There will, of course, be sunshine!
What those early settlers would make of it is anyone's guess. I think even the lifeboatmen of the 1700-1800s would be startled, but it's good to know that their bravery has not been forgotten. Nor the bravery of the huge dray horses who had to pull the lifeboat from its station across the beach to the sea. Sadly I cannot display any of the very old photos available as they are all copyrighted, but for anyone interested, an online visit to The Formby Civic Society's Flickr account (free) will give you the whole story.
And, for a romance fiction writer, there is a story in there somewhere. I just have to find it.
















