Home Books Basket Checkout My Account Help Special Offers Contact us   Cymraeg  
 
Sign In
 
Register
Bibliographical Information
Woman at the Window, TheEmyr Humphreys View more titles by 'Emyr Humphreys'
ISBN: 9781854114891 (1854114891)Publication Date April 2009
Publisher: Seren, Bridgend
Format: Paperback, 208x135 mm, 240 pages Language: English Available Our Price: £7.99 
Woman at the Window, The
There are no Customer Reviews for this title.
 
Write a Customer Review
At the age of ninety, celebrated Welsh novelist Emyr Humphreys gives us this gentle, but haunting selection of short stories, the latest addition to a lifetime of writing, which has included 21 novels as well as short stories, poetry and essays.

I ddathlu'i ben-blwydd yn 90 mlwydd oed, dyma gasgliad o straeon byrion gan y nofelydd nodedig, Emyr Humphreys - casgliad arall i'w ychwanegu at ei restr gynhyrchiol o 21 nofel, yn ogystal â straeon byrion, cerddi ac erthyglau.
Emyr Humpreys has enjoyed a long and distinguished career in the literature of Wales. This volume of short stories appears in the year he reached the age of ninety. He has been described as ‘an intellectual writing for intellectuals’. Although I had never quite seen him in this light, there is no denying that he is a cerebral writer.

The characters in these stories are, quite often, elderly, middle class and introspective. ‘The Grudge’ reveals the author’s considerable skill of characterisation, as do all the other stories to some extent. Some are set in north Wales while others take us to other European countries, including Italy, a country that Mr Humphreys knows well through his war-time work with the Save the Children organisation. Personally I prefer the stories set in Wales, such as ‘Three Old men’, in which the characters in the title discover that old age fails to unite them, as they had thought it would.

‘A Little History’ has two adolescents as its central characters, a Polish girl and a youth from Lleyn. They are all too aware of the uncertain world they have been born into. Their consciousness of a world torn apart by political ideologies develops into a virus which infects them.

Some readers might find some of the stories depressing but one cannot deny their power.

Dewi Roberts

It is possible to use this review for promotional purposes, but the following acknowledgment should be included: A review from www.gwales.com, with the permission of the Welsh Books Council.

Gellir defnyddio'r adolygiad hwn at bwrpas hybu, ond gofynnir i chi gynnwys y gydnabyddiaeth ganlynol: Adolygiad oddi ar www.gwales.com, trwy ganiatâd Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru.
Further Information:
At the age of ninety, celebrated Welsh novelist Emyr Humphreys gives us this gentle, but haunting selection of short stories, the latest addition to a lifetime of writing, which has included 21 novels as well as short stories, poetry and essays.

His theme is life, past and future and the importance of parental and filial love down the generations. His protagonists look back over the pattern of their lives, and often forward also, for the chance to rekindle lost loves and find a home for themselves, either in Wales or in a sunny, but alien expat Europe.

Many characters live with the ghosts of the past, but the memories and lingering regrets mix with a sharp sense that you are never to old for life to throw surprises at you: three comfortably retired men find their sedate reunion dinner turn into a conflict with a knife-wielding escaped prisoner in a pre-Celtic tomb; a trip to the site of their first meeting brings a married couple face to face with a corpse and illusions are shattered when an retired head teacher meets again with his first love.

Friends pass on, partners are left alone, but it is the survivors who are the focus of this collection, the threads of their life examined from childhood to old age. Often their experiences are seen against a wider sense of shifting, post-war Europe, a Europe and a Wales that has become home to refugees from Hungary, Poland or Romania, putting down roots, broadening lives, bringing freshness and change.

This is a collection of mature reflection, weighing up the best part of a century of European history and experience, loss and moving on.

*******************************
A collection of short stories from celebrated author Emyr Humphreys, approaching his 90th birthday and still at the top of his game.

Emyr Humphreys is a major figure in twentieth-century writing and The Woman at the Window is an immensely enjoyable and impressive addition to his outstanding list of award-winning novels and short stories.

Author Stevie Davies says: “A Welsh writer of European stature, Emyr Humphreys is at the height of his powers. Like Sandor Marai, he is a lord of irony, whose wry, sage wit and eagle eyesight capture a panorama of the twentieth century, with its fratricidal wars and struggling ideals, in a richly epigrammatic English. And on the human level, this volume speaks, through its cast of fascinating characters, intimately to the reader’s heart.”

“His style is clean, uncluttered, witty.”
New Welsh Review
“[T]he author continues to be a keen student of human behaviour and motivation, remaining as intrigued by the choices that individuals make as he is by the historical forces that influence them. […] Emyr Humphreys continues to provide an antidote to a picture-postcard Wales whose inhabitants are, as one character puts it, ‘obsessed with rugby and being famous and getting their names in lights in the West End.’”
The Planet
This title is categorised and/or sub-categorised as follows:
There are no Customer Reviews so far for this title.
 
More Titles
People who bought this title also bought the following:
Cyfres Pigion Llafar ...
 
£2.50
 
Buy Now
Cyfres Pigion Llafar ...
 
£2.50
 
Buy Now
Corgi Series: 10. ...
Rhys Davies
£0.99
 
Buy Now
Book of the Month
English
Owain Glyn Dŵr - The ...
Peter Gordon Williams
£7.95
 
Buy Now
Welsh
Cyfres y Dderwen: Yr Alarch Du
Rhiannon Wyn
£5.95
 
Buy Now