Book Details
- Paperback
- 212 pages
- ISBN 978-1-905762-86-6
Publisher Library of Wales
Details
Twice winner of the Gold Medal for Art at the National Eisteddfod.
A Rope of Vines - Journal from a Greek Island is a beautiful and personal account of the time spent by Brenda Chamberlain on the Greek Island of Ydra in the early 1960s.
Sea and harbour, mountain and monastery, her neighbours and friends are unforgettably pictured; these were the reality outside herself while within there was a conflict of emotion and warring desires which is also vividly brought to life. Joy and woe are woven fine in this record: the delight of a multitude of fresh experiences thronging to the senses, the suffering from which she emerges with new understanding of herself and human existence.
Both in the intensity and force of the writing and the eloquent island drawings, A Rope of Vines - Journal from a Greek Island is a distinguished achievement.
Poetry developed alongside that of Dylan Thomas and others of the ‘Welsh School.’
“We invent our own lives, but there remains reality outside oneself, and these enduring boats, laden with melons and water-pots, green peppers, and cattle, point the way to life through abundant dying.”
“Emotion and warring desires are vividly brought to life.” — Dai Smith
A Rope of Vines - Journal from a Greek Island is a beautiful and personal account of the time spent by Brenda Chamberlain on the Greek Island of Ydra in the early 1960s.
Sea and harbour, mountain and monastery, her neighbours and friends are unforgettably pictured; these were the reality outside herself while within there was a conflict of emotion and warring desires which is also vividly brought to life. Joy and woe are woven fine in this record: the delight of a multitude of fresh experiences thronging to the senses, the suffering from which she emerges with new understanding of herself and human existence.
Both in the intensity and force of the writing and the eloquent island drawings, A Rope of Vines - Journal from a Greek Island is a distinguished achievement.
Poetry developed alongside that of Dylan Thomas and others of the ‘Welsh School.’
“We invent our own lives, but there remains reality outside oneself, and these enduring boats, laden with melons and water-pots, green peppers, and cattle, point the way to life through abundant dying.”
“Emotion and warring desires are vividly brought to life.” — Dai Smith
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