The Welsh Girl by Peter Ho Davies

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    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 0618918523
    • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
    • Pub. Date: January 2008
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    Comments from the Seller: Great condition for a used book! Minimal wear. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Shipped to over one million happy customers. Your purchase benefits world literacy!

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    Synopsis

    From the acclaimed writer Peter Ho Davies comes an engrossing wartime love story set in the stunning landscape of North Wales during the final, harrowing months of World War II.

    Young Esther Evans has lived her whole life within the confines of her remote mountain village. The daughter of a fiercely nationalistic sheep farmer, Esther yearns for a taste of the wider world that reaches her only through broadcasts on the BBC. Then, in the wake of D-day, the world comes to her in the form of a German POW camp set up on the outskirts of Esther's village.

    The arrival of the Germans in the camp is a source of intense curiosity in the local pub, where Esther pulls pints for both her neighbors and the unwelcome British guards. One summer evening she follows a group of schoolboys to the camp boundary. As the boys heckle the prisoners across the barbed wire fence, one soldier seems to stand apart. He is Karsten Simmering, a German corporal, only eighteen, a young man of tormented conscience struggling to maintain his honor and humanity. To Esther's astonishment, Karsten calls out to her.

    These two young people from worlds apart will be drawn into a perilous romance that calls into personal question the meaning of love, family, loyalty, and national identity. The consequences of their relationship resonate through the lives of a vividly imagined cast of characters: the drunken BBC comedian who befriends Esther, Esther's stubborn father, and the resentful young British "evacuee" who lives on the farm -- even the German-Jewish interrogator investigating the most notorious German prisoner in Wales, Rudolf Hess.

    Peter Ho Davies has been hailed for his "all-encompassing empathy that is without borders" (Elle). That trancendent compassion shines through The Welsh Girl, a novel that is both thought-provoking and emotionally enthralling.

    The New York Times - Jennifer Egan

    Davies’s achievement is significant: like good social history, The Welsh Girl invites us to question history’s master narratives, which have a way of wiping out the contradictions and complications of real life, much like the propaganda films Karsten is forced to watch in the P.O.W. camp.

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    Biography

    Peter Ho Davies is on the faculty of the graduate program in creative writing at the University of Michigan. His debut collection The Ugliest House in the World won the John Llewellyn Rhys and PEN/Macmillan awards in Britain. His second collection, Equal Love, was hailed by the New York Times Book Review for its “stories as deep and clear as myth.” It was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and a New York Times Notable Book. In 2003 Davies was named among the “Best of Young British Novelists” by Granta. The Welsh GIrl is his first novel. The son of a Welsh father and Chinese mother, Davies was raised in England and spent his summers in Wales. He is married and has one son.

    Customer Reviews

    Better if you've been to Wales.by DrSEP

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    09/06/2009: If you enjoy historical fiction and/or are looking for a different setting, this is an engaging read. Well known and common folk are intermingled during WW II. Human vulnerabilities are exposed,through the prisoners of war, their jailers, lovers, and mothers. The strength and convictions of the Welsh people, their fierce pride and nationalism emerge with the Nazi regime as a backdrop.

    Reading this during a recent visit to Wales was very worthwhile.

    I have never read a war novel before, but this book has me wanting to read more of them......by KLM421

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    05/01/2009: This novel is a little slow to start, but it picks up really fast midway and then you cannot put it down until you finish. I was not prepared for the rape that happens in the very beginning of the novel, but he doesnt go into too much detail about that, you just know it happened. That was really my only dislike of the novel and I still strongly recommend it.

    I Also Recommend: Trinity, Sinn Fein: A Hundred Turbulent Years, Quentins, In Search Of Ancient Ireland, The Constitution in Exile: How the Federal Government Has Seized Power by Rewriting the Supreme Law of the Land.


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