One of Merthyr's Victorian brickyard girls, Saran watches the world
parade past her doorstep on the banks of the stinking and rat-infested
Morlais Brook: the fair-day revellers; the chapel-goers and the funeral
processions. She never misses a trip to the town's wooden theatres,
despite her life ruled by the 5 a.m. hooter, pit strikes, politics and
the First World War that takes away so many of her children. Her Glyn
will work a treble shift for beer money; her brother Harry is the
district's most notorious drinker and fighter until he is 'saved'. The
town changes and grows but Saran is still there for Glyn, for Harry, for
her children and grandchildren. In his 1935 novel Black Parade, writer,
soldier and political activist Jack Jones creates a superbly riotous,
clear and unsentimental picture of Merthyr life as his home town reels
headlong into the twentieth century.