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Emyr Humphreys (1919–2020)

Author of The Taliesin Tradition: A Quest for the Welsh Identity

31+ Works 223 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

During a remarkable career spanning over seventy years as a writer, Emyr Humphreys has published more than two dozen novels (money of them prize-winning), as well as several collections of short stories.

Includes the names: Emyr Humphreys, Humphries Emyr

Series

Works by Emyr Humphreys

A Toy Epic (1958) — Author — 23 copies
Flesh and Blood (1974) 15 copies
Outside the House of Baal (1965) 14 copies
A Man's Estate (1955) 13 copies
The Best of Friends (1978) 12 copies
Salt of the Earth (1985) 10 copies
Bonds of Attachment (1991) 8 copies
Unconditional Surrender (1996) 7 copies
Open Secrets (1988) 6 copies
Old People Are a Problem (2003) 6 copies
The Shop (2005) 5 copies
The Woman at the Window (2009) 5 copies
An Absolute Hero (1986) 5 copies

Associated Works

The Penguin Book of Welsh Short Stories (1976) — Contributor — 104 copies
Presenting Saunders Lewis (1973) — Translator — 14 copies
Apocalypse: An Anthology (2020) — Contributor — 6 copies
Glas-nos: Poems for Peace/Cerddi dros Heddwch (1987) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
A middle aged couple. Aled and Marian, worry when they meet their daughter's boyfriend and plan to send her to visit old family friends in Italy but things don't turn out as they wish. Later they take the trip themselves and become involved in another young girl's life - will they make the same mistakes?

This is a story that examines how well we know other people or indeed ourselves. As Aled looks back on his life and marriage; his student days and the future of his academic career can he show more still learn anything about himself and Marian and is their any hope for the future.

I liked the Welsh background and the relationships in this book. I also enjoyed the academic side and the contrast of life in Anglesey and Tuscany. The way the author weaves his story made it well worth reading.
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Winner of the Somerset Maugham Award in 1953, and it's easy to see why it would be rated highly: an amiable, if unobtrusive sense of humor, a reliably unreliable narrator, and a willingness to defy narrative expectations. The themes are important ones, too: the human tendency to build stories out of our rather shabby lives and the workings of conscience and, presumably, grace.

Awards

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
31
Also by
5
Members
223
Popularity
#100,549
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
2
ISBNs
64

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