The Teller by John Clegg

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The Teller by John Clegg

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The Teller by John Clegg

The Teller is the story of a family struggling to survive in the late bronze age in an area now known as the Welsh Marches. The saga is related to a tribe in the mid-iron age by an itinerant story teller and describes how their ancestors coped with conditions existing then and how circumstances forced a quest on two sons of the principal family in the tale. All descriptions of clothing, weaponry, tools, animals, transport, food, drink, dwellings, and prevailing climate are based on what is presently archaeologically accepted and what is known regarding living conditions in Britain at the time. In order to bring the characters to life, a fairly contemporary dialogue is used. Of course there is no way of knowing how they really talked in those far off times and so no attempt has been made to simulate it. In fact the book is a tribute to the likelihood that intellectually, in everyday matters, they were probably pretty similar to ourselves. The inspiration for such a portrayal came when watching a programme about life in Papua New Guinea. A tribesman bedecked in paint and feathers stepped out of the stone age to board a light aircraft, valley hopping to nearby villages. His manner was completely matter-of-fact and the quip he came out with was subtitled. I smiled to myself and thought, 'That's just what one of the locals in Shropshire might have said.' With utmost respect to my friends in Shropshire I hasten to add.

The Teller is the story of a family struggling to survive in the late bronze age in an area now known as the Welsh Marches. The saga is related to a tribe in the mid-iron age by an itinerant story teller and describes how their ancestors coped with conditions existing then and how circumstances forced a quest on two sons of the principal family in the tale. All descriptions of clothing, weaponry, tools, animals, transport, food, drink, dwellings, and prevailing climate are based on what is presently archaeologically accepted and what is known regarding living conditions in Britain at the time. In order to bring the characters to life, a fairly contemporary dialogue is used. Of course there is no way of knowing how they really talked in those far off times and so no attempt has been made to simulate it. In fact the book is a tribute to the likelihood that intellectually, in everyday matters, they were probably pretty similar to ourselves. The inspiration for such a portrayal came when watching a programme about life in Papua New Guinea. A tribesman bedecked in paint and feathers stepped out of the stone age to board a light aircraft, valley hopping to nearby villages. His manner was completely matter-of-fact and the quip he came out with was subtitled. I smiled to myself and thought, 'That's just what one of the locals in Shropshire might have said.' With utmost respect to my friends in Shropshire I hasten to add.

John Clegg is a poet and bookseller in London. His most recent collection is Holy Toledo! (Carcanet, 2016). John Heath-Stubbs was born in 1918 and educated at Queens College, Oxford. A critic, anthologist and translator as well as a poet, he has received the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry and the prestigious Cross of St Augustine. Carcanet published seven previous collections by Heath-Stubbs, as well as a Collected Poems and a collection of his literary essays. In 1988 he was awarded the OBE. His poetry was published by Carcanet for almost thirty years. He died in London in December 2006.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9781398408746
ISBN 10 1398408743
Title The Teller
Author John Clegg
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Austin Macauley Publishers
Year published 2021-10-29
Number of pages 480
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
Note Unavailable