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Sto caricando le informazioni... The Prince's Pen (New Stories from the Mabinogion) (originale 2011; edizione 2012)di Horatio Clare
Informazioni sull'operaThe Prince's Pen di Horatio Clare (2011)
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With Wales and Pakistan being the only countries left in the free world, award-winning author Horatio Clare filters politics and religion through ancient British myth. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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The three parts of The Prince's Pen deal with three threats to this Welsh resurgence: surveillance, most visibly through the use of drones; anxieties over issues about faith, tradition and patriotism once a fragile peace is found; and the sinister and covert power of supranational corporations. For a novella published in 2012 it is significant that all these issues not only remain pertinent now but that they are likely to continue to be so for some time to come, making The Prince's Pen somewhat prescient.
All the more interesting, then, is the fact that this story is an updating of a medieval Welsh tale, Lludd and Llefelys, itself based on a gloss on the 11th-century ragbag that is Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain. The original story recounts three plagues that strike Britain, an invasion of outsiders who are able to monitor every conversation, a dire scream heard by everybody annually which is traced to two dragons fighting, and a rapacious giant who under cover of night appropriates all the prepared food stored in Britain during the day. How well Clare takes the bare bones of this old tale and builds it into something equally mythic, yet one which also allows us to suspend our disbelief, is an indication of his narrative skills. I was only shaken out of an acceptance of the novella's possible reality by a shift to a magic realist episode towards the end, but that could be put down to the unsuspecting narrator's drugged state at the time.
What most allowed me to invest in the storyline were the small cast of characters, from a couple of bit parts (like Theo the computer boffin) to the two larger than life brothers, Uzma the proactive bride and of course Clip, the scribe and first-person narrator. Each was distinctive, with motivations I could credit. I liked too the ambiguity implicit in the nature of Clip, only finally resolved -- if the reader hadn't already guessed from clues scattered through the text -- after the last sentence of The Prince's Pen.
That the scribe also has a distinctive appearance from a cleft lip, despite an attempt at corrective surgery, is clear from both name and from unkind jeers received. Such a stigma may be symbolic of the outsider, as is also the case with Uzma whose marriage with Levello was a strategic measure, designed to counter a common enemy, but who's regarded with suspicion after the initial crisis is over. Outsiders can provide different perspectives from those who, because embedded from birth, may not always be in the best position to give unbiased assessments of their situation; but they can also become unwitting and even unwilling scapegoats when things go wrong.
Much of the success of The Prince's Pen comes from its near-realist grounding, and that includes a strong sense of place. London and Oxford get brief mentions but most of the action takes place in recognisable towns across South Wales, from Pembrokeshire to Powys, including specific sites such as The Bear Inn in Crickhowell. That saves it from the disadvantages associated with, say, the more dream-like nature of Fflur Dafydd's The White Trail; this latter, also in Seren's series of Mabinogion retellings, I found a little less satisfactory because it felt more insubstantial and less focused than The Prince's Pen. But that's not to deny Dafydd's imaginative recreation of a native Welsh tale, for old tales told anew -- like Clare's novella, always have new things to say.
http://wp.me/s2oNj1-clip ( )