The Alone to the Alone

by Gwyn Thomas

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The Alone to the Alone unites Gwyn Thomas lyrical and philosophical flights of narrative in a satire whose savagery is only relieved by irrepressible laughter. It is Gwyn Thomas most shaped work: the underlying meaning of South Wales' history is not so much documented as laid bare for universal dissection and dissemination.

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3 reviews
The only way to give you a genuine idea of this book is to quote it -- extensively, which I'll refrain from overdoing. The Alone to the Alone is endearing and funny, and the grey reality of its subject matter only serves to emphasise the warmth and humour of the book itself. It does gymnastics with language without even touching the edge of self-conscious pretentiousness (at least as I see it).

His complacency, between the whisky and the way we stood there dumbly listening, had reached a fresh peak. His face looked the cosiest thing on earth. With leather binding on the ears to take the strain one could have sat on it and felt grateful.

As for plot, well, it's set in Wales, in the slums, during the Great Depression. It's about love and show more poverty; unemployment and the Government; justice and injustice, with a greater emphasis on the latter. It's a political book, and decidedly left-wing. There is anger in this novel, but it's veiled by a sort of ironic garrulousness - and the resigned tone of the narrative voice is perhaps its greatest charm.

We were seeking, without wealth, influence or a map, for the materials of a new social understanding aimed at something lower than love, a muddied concept, but fixed beyond the chilling reach of envy and contempt. A large order as all know who have taken more than half a dozen steps beyond the cradle. Now here was this Shadrach measuring our rhapsody for the hatchet and describing us as woodlice. We gave the term some thought for we had never been called that in the afternoon before. We are larger, fairer-skinned and faster. We eat no wood unless it has been thoroughly ground beforehand...

Gwyn Thomas reminds me a lot of Ruth Park - but that comparison would give a slightly skewed idea of either author. Still, think of The Harp in the South, and you've got something at least similar to The Alone to the Alone, only the latter is funnier, has more elastic language, and verges oh so slightly on the absurd.

I'm not sure why others feel there isn't an ending to this book; it was satisfying to me. Those who deserve it most get their come-uppance, and there is a much-needed avoidance of a fairytale happy-ever-after.
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Absolutely fantastic book I read grinning from ear to ear with the occasional burst of out-loud laughter, only to be disappointed (and somewhat suprised) by the fact Gwyn Thomas hasn't really ended it. Or at least he hasn't ended it very well. If he'd finished it properly this really would have been a stone-cold classic, a Welsh Flann O'Brien but better. The quality of the prose is excellent. Looking forward to Dark Philsophers; Gwyn Thomas seems to have given himself a bit more space to work in with that one, judging from the width of it.
A perfect book for those without a sense of justice, poetic and otherwise.

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21+ Works 190 Members
Gwyn Thomas was born in Cymmer, Wales on July 6, 1913. He was educated at the University of Oxford and at Complutense University of Madrid. He wrote 16 books during his lifetime including All Things Betray Thee, The Alone to the Alone, and The World Cannot Hear You. He also wrote six plays including The Keep and an autobiography entitled A Few show more Selected Exits. He died on April 13, 1981 at the age of 67. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Alone to the Alone
Alternate titles
Venus and the Voters
Disambiguation notice
'Venus and the Voters' and 'The Alone to the Alone' are the same book. 'Venus and the Voters' is the title used in the U.S.; 'The Alone to the Alone' is the title used in the U.K."

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6039 .H59Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1900-1960
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Statistics

Members
26
Popularity
1,038,355
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (4.25)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
4
ASINs
1