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One Moonlit Night

4.21 ( 534 Ratings by Goodreads)
One Moonlit Night

One Moonlit Night

4.21 (534 Ratings by Goodreads)
paperback
Published: 8 January, 2009
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Description

This simple novel tells of one boy's journey into the grown-up world. By the light of a full moon our narrator and his friends Huw and Moi witness a side to their Welsh village life that they had no idea existed, and their childish innocence is exchanged for a shocking introduction to the horrors of the adult world. First published in Welsh in 1961, Philip Mitchell's translation, the first complete translation in English, captures all the vibrancy of Prichard's magnificent prose. In this new edition Jan Morris and Niall Griffiths explain why this remains one of the Britain's most significant and brilliant pieces of fiction.
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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781847671073
ISBN10 1847671071
Number Of Pages 192
Item Weight 134 g
Product Dimensions 12 x 198 x 130 mm
Publisher / Reseller Canongate Books Ltd
Format paperback
Edition Main
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Media Reviews

An esoteric masterpiece. -- Jan Morris
Heart-wrenching. A classic to be read and reread. * * Daily Telegraph * *
One of the oddest, most elusive, most haunting novels ever. -- Niall Griffiths
A remarkable book that recalls Under Milk Wood. * * Times Literary Supplement * *
One of the great lost voices of Welsh literature. For its portrayal of a vanished way of life, and for its evocation of the tearless sadness of insanity, this strange, melancholy book deserves to be widely read. * * Observer * *
A very moving, often funny account of childhood. * * Spectator * *
Lyrical and visceral, comic and tragic, compellingly earthy and maddeningly gothic - after 40 years this literary oddity continues to elude classification. * * Observer * *
Challenging, compressed and utterly compelling. * * Guardian * *
Premonitions of insanity and the mercurial personality of its narrator give the story a hallucinatory, ambiguous edge. * * Herald * *

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GoodReads Reviews

Author's Bio

CARADOG PRICHARD (1904-80) was born in the slate-quarrying town of Bethesda, in north-west Wales. He moved to London, and after the Second World War became a sub-editor on the foreign desk at the Daily Telegraph. During this time he wrote four prize-winning odes and this exceptional novel.

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