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Bibliographical Information
At the Bright Hem of God – Radnorshire PastoralPeter J. Conradi View more titles by 'Peter J. Conradi'
ISBN: 9781854114907 (1854114905)Publication Date December 2009
Publisher: Seren, Bridgend
Format: Paperback, 209x136 mm, 240 pages Language: English Available Our Price: £9.99 
At the Bright Hem of God – Radnorshire Pastoral
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Peter Conradi fell in love with Radnorshire on his first visit in 1965 and At the Bright Hem of God is by way of being his love-letter to mid-Wales. His book covers, within its autobiographical frame, an account of the history and religious life of the area as reflected through writers of the county and its adjacent areas. Reprint; first published in June 2009.

Syrthiodd Peter Conradi mewn cariad â Sir Faesyfed yn ystod ei ymweliad cyntaf â'r ardal ym 1965, a'r gyfrol hon yw ei lythyr caru, fel petai, i ganolbarth Cymru. Tu fewn i'r fframwaith hunangofiannol ceir yn y llyfr gofnod o hanes a bywyd crefyddol yr ardal trwy lygaid awduron lleol a chyfagos. Adargraffiad; cyhoeddwyd gyntaf ym mis Mehefin 2009.
This wonderful book defies classification for it does not fall into a specific genre. Subtitled 'Radnorshire Pastoral' it embraces the history, literature, reflection and anecdotage of this county. It is completely beguiling and I found it compelling.

As I have a particular interest in literary visitors to Wales, I was fascinated in the author’s account of the number of celebrities who have either lived or stayed in Radnorshire. I was fascinated to discover that Rousseau lived there for a short time. Shelley also lived there while a notable visitor was Wordsworth. Mr Conradi writes that his ‘We are seven’ was inspired by a little girl whom he met at Goodrich. (In actual fact Wordsworth met the child at Conwy, but this is a minor quibble.) Not surprisingly, the author includes a section on Francis Kilvert and another, very much nearer in time, on Bruce Chatwin who spent a year in the region while he was researching On The Black Hill.

R.S. Thomas, a poet usually associated with north Wales, wrote some of his work as a result of visiting the more isolated parts of Radnorshire. Roland Mathias also wrote some fine work there. But it is Ruth Bidgood whom one immediately thinks of when considering the twentieth-century literature of the county. Mr Conradi rightly describes her as “without question the pre-eminent poet and historian of upland mid-Wales”.

I should add that the book conveys historical insights. It is particularly good on the social changes which have affected the county in the twentieth century. Mr Conradi writes of the depopulation of the hills and the effect in human terms. This made it fair game for the Ministry of Defence which sent RAF jets to practice low level flying, shattering the peace and terrifying both people and livestock.

This book deserves a wide readership and complements Seren’s ‘Borderline’ series.

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.
Author Biography:
Peter J. Conradi is an Anglo-Jewish author and journalist. He is most widely known as the biographer of Iris Murdoch, and has also published books on Angus Wilson and John Fowles. Outside literature he has published Going Buddhist, a moving and clear-sighted contemplation on Buddhism.
Further Information:
Peter Conradi fell in love with Radnorshire on his first visit in 1965 and At the Bright Hem of God is by way of being his love-letter to mid-Wales. His book covers, within its autobiographical frame, an account of the history and religious life of the area as reflected through writers of the county and its adjacent areas, starting in 1176 and going up to the present. His themes cover solitude and community, seers and remembrancers, a variety of different mystics and recluses as well as Rousseau in Radnorshire, who in 1766 planned to settle near Knighton. He never made it, but all his ideas did.

In this fascinating book, Conradi explores the special place that is Radnorshire: rural – wild at times – a country of mountain and valley remoteness that has shaped the lives of its inhabitants. Drawing on his long experience of visiting and living in Radnorshire, Conradi selects key moments in its history, from the Middle Ages to the twenty-first century, and examines the responses of writers as varied as Thomas Traherne and Bruce Chatwin, via and Jean Jacques Rousseau. The result is a unique portrait of the county, what it is like to have lived there and to live there still, and captures the essence of a hidden part of Wales and Britain.

Within this narrative Conradi examines, too, the various landscapes of borders – physical, emotional, intellectual – from his own particular racial, religious, spiritual, sexual, philosophical identity, a complementary exploration of the human condition. Conradi’s beautiful and perceptive narrative is supplemented by superb line drawings by Radnorshire artist Simon Dorrell.

“[At the Bright Hem of God] is extraordinarily rich in narrative and scope of reference, and often poetic in its evocation of this loneliest of rural places, a landscape of 'golden silences'. Wandering smoothly and beguilingly among topics, personalities and historical periods, startling with little known facts, both celebration and elegy, it is a lovely book.”
PN Review 190

"elegantly written"
New Welsh Review

“poets and writers who were born here [in Radnorshire], sojourned here, or just dreamed of visiting, Conradi weaves them all into Radnorshire’s warp to create a stunning tapestry, injecting familiar names with fresh insights. […] Conradi’s Radnorshire enables a thrilling glimpse of […] eternity”
Church Times
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