The first part of the book explores how a group of people depends on the textile industry for their livelihood, first as spinners or weavers working in their own homes and then as workers in factories which grow larger and use larger equipment employing fewer people. The novel also explores the relationship between employers and employees and the move to create trade unions as the workers attempt to ensure that they have a say in their working conditions.
The second part of the novel tells of the impact of the Napoleonic wars on the families of Kingsbridge and describes the experiences of some of the Kingsbridge residents involved in the battles at this time.
But the novel is primarily about individual people and how they struggle to survive under conditions where their control over their lives is limited by those who believe that they are the people of power in the community. The rise of Methodism is another theme of the book.
The Kingsbridge series consists of five books - The Evening and the Morning (beginning 997); The Pillars of the Earth (beginning in 1135); World Without End (beginning in 1327); A Column of Fire (beginning in 1558) and now The Armour of Light (beginning in 1792).
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