How Green Was My Valley (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)
|
| Price: |
5 new or used available from £2.00
Average customer review:Product Description
First published in 1939. The author captures the song of his nation of singers and made it into the story of the childhood and youth of Huw Morgan, a miner's son, in a South Wales valley.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #478105 in Books
- Published on: 1991-04-25
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 448 pages
Customer Reviews
a plea for this book to be appreciated as it deserves to be
Why oh why is this book not better known by a wider public? I first read it when I was about 13 years old, and was entranced by it. As someone who reads voraciously, I have returned to it from time to time, and am frankly amazed that I have never in my 30 years since then read a book to equal it in my enjoyment of the beautiful prose, the depth of the emotion it evokes in the reader, and my involvement in the life of the young Huw Morgan. Even though the experiences of a young Welsh boy and his community could not be further from my own, yet I have entered into them wholeheartedly and fully through the poetry of Richard Llewellyn's writing, and I don't think I will ever read a more profound yet simple story.
How Green Was My Valley
I first read this book over 20 years ago. I was immediately immersed in the lives of the Welsh Morgan family and their mining community. I was also to find out the role we English had in the suppression of their language and culture.
I can honestly that this is probably one of the best books I have ever read.
A Lost Classic
How Green Was My Valley is truly a lost classic. Llewellyn could not have more beautifully recreated the long-gone world of 19th century Wales.
It is a slow book to get into, and at first it seems to be a shallow excercise in nostalgia. But the undercurrents soon appear, of politics and family tensions, that will grow and evolve throughout the course of the book.
Yet though the idyllic landscape of Huw Morgan's childhood is perhaps doomed from the outset, he - looking back on this time as an old man - can both appreciate his days with an adult's hindsight, and also through the eyes of his younger self.
The latter aspect is what makes this book a classic. I have not read another novel which captures what it is like to be a child so well. Aspects of the young Huw's character - his occasional arrogance, his fascination with mundane things - make sense when we consider what we were like at his age. But what is really astounding is how the excitement, joy, innocence and love of childhood are recreated by Llewellyn - when he writes of the sound of Welsh voices echoing round the valleys, it is as vivid as one of your own cherished childhood memories. However, Llewellyn is not merely dabbling in nostalgia. He portrays Huw growing up, and the mixture of bitter disappointments and greater joys and responsibilities this brings.
Throughout the novel there is a strong sense of character, yet tempered by Huw's narration. The result of this is that, though some of the characters (Huw's brothers, for example) are seemingly not totally fleshed out, this is clearly done on purpose. It's hard to explain, but Llewellyn sticks to his first-person narrator to the extent of only showing characters how Huw saw them at the time, whilst letting in a little bit of hindsight. Characters' personalities are hinted at - take Dai Bando the fighter, for example, he always acts kindly to Huw, but later on when other aspects of his personality are unveiled (to make him more of a three dimensional character) we cannot say that this came completely out of the blue.
The best example of character is Huw's father. Comparing him with Atticus in confirmed-classic To Kill a Mockingbird: though, like Valley, Mockingbird is told by the narrator looking back on her youth, the young Scot is never as convincingly child-like as the young Huw is. However, whereas Atticus was a strangely infallible and unreal character, Gwilym Morgan is not. This is evident early on in the novel in his dealings with the miners - the young Huw still saw him as a brilliant person, but the old Huw can see in hindsight (as can we) that Gwilym was sometimes wrong in what he thought, and sometimes he saw this and sometimes he didn't. Yet we only care for him all the more because of this.
I apologise for the length of this review, as it is hard to describe how fantastic How Green Was My Valley is without simply repeating the word "beautiful" over and over again. The novel has its faults: it is slightly repetitive, and the slow pace and eye for detail is certainly not for everyone. Yet none of these things sufficiently explain why the book is not as widely known and read nowadays as it was in 1939.
In summary, How Green Was My Valley is a deeply poignant and emotional novel. It is not emotional because it tugs at your heart-strings with cheap melodrama. It is emotional because it is an allegory for the halycon days of all our youths, and the exchanges we make when we grow up.
(Imagine my joy when I discovered that I'm of part-Welsh descent, and my great-great-grandfather was also named Huw!)


![How Green Was My Valley [DVD] [1941]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51C50ARQ4PL._SL75_.jpg)

