Greyfrith: Difference between revisions
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'''Greyfrith''' was an [[English]] village in the [[Pennines]], of which [[Deborah Castle]] was a resident. The little town was a centre for county [[cricket]] play, and pictures on display at the local [[train]] station proudly gave witness to the fact that snow had once stopped a match — something that had never occurred in any county cricket season, anywhere in the world. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Father Time (novel)|Father Time]]'') | '''Greyfrith''' was an [[English]] village in the [[Pennines]], of which [[Deborah Castle]] was a resident. The little town was a centre for county [[cricket]] play, and pictures on display at the local [[train]] station proudly gave witness to the fact that snow had once stopped a match — something that had never occurred in any county cricket season, anywhere in the world. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Father Time (novel)|Father Time]]'') | ||
== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
Greyfrith is not a real village, and therefore the story about | Greyfrith is not a real village, and therefore the story about its snow-delayed cricket match is also a fiction. | ||
[[Category:English towns and villages]] | [[Category:English towns and villages]] |
Revision as of 02:48, 15 March 2014
Greyfrith was an English village in the Pennines, of which Deborah Castle was a resident. The little town was a centre for county cricket play, and pictures on display at the local train station proudly gave witness to the fact that snow had once stopped a match — something that had never occurred in any county cricket season, anywhere in the world. (PROSE: Father Time)
Behind the scenes
Greyfrith is not a real village, and therefore the story about its snow-delayed cricket match is also a fiction.