Bright Bewildering Green
Hughes, John
€12.00
ISBN: 0 946640 73 4
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Physical Copy (supplied by Lilliput Press)
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Description:'A story remarkable because commonplace in rural Ireland - the surplus
child, the tragedy of the extra mouth.' - from the Foreword by John Stalker
'A heartening, eloquent but dispassionate testimony to the triumph of
determination over adversity. Hughes shows himself to be a writer of
unusual talent, clarity and perception.' - Albert Smith, Irish Independent
'Powerfully written, with the vivid clarity of a naive painting.' - Roy
Foster, Book of the Year, The Irish Times
Bright Bewildering Green is a vivid, harrowing tale - told from the
emotional security of middle age - of an impoverished childhood in rural
Northern Ireland during the 1950s and early '60s. In its detailed evocation
of the realities of life for an orphan family on an Armagh hill-farm, the
sentimentality of the family pig is bled to death. William vents his
frustrations on John, his sensitive youngest brother, and severe beatings
lead to the boy's collapse and treatment for epilepsy until he escapes to
Coventry.
Inherited pluck and fortitude sustain him in a strange city, and from an
achieved tranquillity the author allows himself to reflect upon the
horrors, and occasional joys, endured as a child, and faces them with
dispassion. This compelling narrative is the record of a survivor.
John Hughes was born in Newry, Co. Down in 1947, reared near Markethill,
Co. Armagh, and educated at Cladymore. He lost both parents aged eleven,
migrated to England at fifteen and worked as a floor-sweeper and butcher's
boy before opening his own retail bedding business. An accomplished
clay-pigeon shot and weight-lifter, he is now a commercial property
developer and lives in Coventry with his wife. Bright Bewildering Green is
his first book.

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