The Welsh Girl
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Average customer review:Product Description
In 1944, a German Jewish refugee is sent to Wales to interview Rudolf Hess; in Snowdonia, a seventeen-year-old girl, the daughter of a fiercely nationalistic shepherd, dreams of the bright lights of an English city; and in a nearby POW camp, a German soldier struggles to reconcile his surrender with his sense of honour. As their lives intersect, all three will come to question where they belong and where their loyalties lie.
Peter Ho Daviess thought-provoking and profoundly moving first novel traces a perilous wartime romance as it explores the bonds of love and duty that hold us to family, country, and ultimately our fellow man. Vividly rooted in history and landscape, THE WELSH GIRL reminds us anew of the pervasive presence of the past, and the startling intimacy of the foreign.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #2158 in Books
- Published on: 2007-12-27
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 352 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'A beautifully crafted, lyrical novel' -- Maggie O'Farrell, Observer Books of the Year 'Moving, memorable and beautifully written' -- Jessica Mann, Sunday Telegraph 'Deeply felt and vividly imagined' -- Lionel Shriver, Daily Telegraph 'Fresh and engaging!Some sentences and passages are crafted so beautifully and seemingly effortlessly that it provokes envy.' -- David Cornett, Sunday Express 'Quietly powerful! a fine piece of work -- Stephen Knight, Times Literary Supplement 'His prose and the evocation of time and place are almost always of the highest order!he approaches the Second World War with a fresh and contemporary style, a gift that he shares with Kazuo Ishiguro' -- Russell Celyn Jones, The Times 'A scintillating instance of fictional imagination applied to history' -- Richard Eder, New York Times 'Impressive!a compelling story in itself, but Davies's special skill lies in integrating conflicts that drive the narrative at a more intense level' -- Richard Gwyn, Independent 'deft and graceful' -- Good Book Guide 20080401
An unlikely World War II romance is the subject of this ambitious first novel from the Welsh-Malaysian author of the story collections The Ugliest House in the World (1997) and Unequal Love (2000).Following a prologue, in which British army officer Rotheram (son of a German Jewish war-hero-turned-pacifist) is assigned to interrogate captured Nazi officer Rudolf Hess, the scene shifts to a farming village in mountainous northern Wales. Davies gradually connects the shadow of the war to the experiences of teenaged barmaid Esther Evans, whose sheepherder father loudly proclaims his countrymen's ingrained distrust of all things English (including the war effort). Another narrative pattern emerges in the ordeal of Karsten Simmering, imprisoned in the POW camp the English army has built not far from the Evans farm, and guilt-ridden over his decision to persuade the soldiers under his command to surrender. Karsten's agonies of conscience are juxtaposed with the progress of Esther's maturing (she's raped by her boyfriend, a soldier in the British army, and shares the sufferings of the family who have lost their son Rhys-the decent man Esther might have married). The plots coalesce as Karsten escapes, hides in the Evans's barn and draws closer to Esther-with consequences that will compromise his "freedom" and alter her future. The story comes full circle as the completion of Rotheram's mission ironically confirms the likelihood that he, like so many others maimed and transformed by the war, belongs nowhere, and has no identity. The book is overlong and explains too much, but succeeds admirably in its presentation of engaging major characters, each of whom is given a complex and intriguing personal and family history. The result is a rich, moving explication of the ambiguities of duty and sacrifice, courage and perseverance.Not quite The English Patient, but a credible dramatization of a quality too seldom encountered in contemporary fiction: nobility. (Kirkus Reviews)
Review
'A beautifully crafted, lyrical novel'
(Maggie O'Farrell, Observer Books of the Year )'Moving, memorable and beautifully written'
(Jessica Mann, Sunday Telegraph )'Deeply felt and vividly imagined'
(Lionel Shriver, Daily Telegraph )'Fresh and engaging…Some sentences and passages are crafted so beautifully and seemingly effortlessly that it provokes envy.'
(David Cornett, Sunday Express )'Quietly powerful… a fine piece of work
(Stephen Knight, Times Literary Supplement )'His prose and the evocation of time and place are almost always of the highest order…he approaches the Second World War with a fresh and contemporary style, a gift that he shares with Kazuo Ishiguro'
(Russell Celyn Jones, The Times )'A scintillating instance of fictional imagination applied to history'
(Richard Eder, New York Times )'Impressive…a compelling story in itself, but Davies’s special skill lies in integrating conflicts that drive the narrative at a more intense level'
(Richard Gwyn, Independent )'deft and graceful' (Good Book Guide )
Sunday Telegraph
'A moving, memorable and beautifully written book about displacement and its opposite...a gripping human story'
Customer Reviews
It is a poor read where facts have gone out of the window.
Having read the critics about this book,I bought it.What a disappointment,it dragged on,it repeated itself over and over again.Now that I have waded through it I am no wiser for what I have read,it said nothing.I am not the only one in the family who is of the same opinion,although we normally read totaly different books we both had a go at this to see if either of us had opposed ideas,we didn't.How it got on to the Richard and Judy list I cannot imagine although I have found previously, books seem to get on to that list without too much merit.I will think twice before I purchase a book recomended by them again.Thinking about it,maybe the auther tried to be too clever bringing into this tale,bits of world war two of which he knew only hearsay but few facts.The entire book was badly written and the story badly planned.Don't waste your time reading this when there are so many really good books available.
Richard and Judy clouded my judgement!
It sounded so good when they discussed it - but actually this novel is confused and confusing, without a central character with whom the reader can empathise.
I was really disappointed and ask myself who chooses these R and J titles?
If you are really interested in the war then you might find it tolerable, but as a rollicking good read - it fails.
Something my mum didn't enjoy...
...but I thought it was quite enjoyable. Nothing earth-shattering but it did keep my interest all the way through.
The Welsh slant to a WWII story was something that I hadn't really considered before but I'm afraid I really didn't see the point of the Hesse storyline, I didn't feel that it added very much to the plot.
I borrowed this book from my Mum who said that she didn't enjoy it at all, but then we do tend to have completely opposing taste in books!
Overall recommendation - good beach / tube read!





