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The Blue Book of Nebo (2018)

par Manon Steffan Ros

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825330,149 (4.13)11
"Winner of the 2018 National Eisteddfod Prose Medal and the 2019 Llyfr y Flwyddyn (Wales Book of the Year) After nuclear disaster, Rowenna and her young son, Dylan, are among the rare survivors in rural northwest Wales. Left alone in their isolated hillside cottage, after others have died or abandoned the towns and villages, they must learn new skills in order to remain alive. With no electricity or modern technology they must return to the old ways of living off the land, developing new personal resources. While they become more skilled and stronger, the relationship between mother and son changes in subtle ways, as Dylan must take on adult responsibilities, especially once his baby sister Mona arrives. Despite their close understanding, mother and son have their own secrets, which emerge as in turn they jot down their thoughts and memories in a found notebook. As each reflects on their old life and the events since the disaster which has brought normal, twenty-first century life to an end, their new-found maturity and sense of purpose contrast not only with their old selves but also with new emotional challenges when Mona sickens and dies. In this touching prize-winning and best-selling new novel, Manon Steffan Ros not only explores the human capacity to find new strengths when faced with the need to survive, but also questions the structures and norms of the contemporary world"--… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 11 mentions

5 sur 5
#ReadAroundTheWorld. #Wales

This 2023 Carnegie Medal winner is a YA post-apocalyptic dystopian sci-fi, set near Anglesey in Wales, after a nuclear disaster known as “The End.” The novel is written by Welsh author Manon Steffan Ros and has been translated from Welsh.

After the nuclear disaster all technology has disappeared and Rowenna, her son Dylan, and baby daughter Mona (Sión and Dwynwen in the original Welsh story) must learn how to go back to basics to survive. In their isolated rural cottage young Dylan learns to become a handyman and producer of food and Rowenna learns to overcome her sensibilities and forage. He and his mother take turns in recording their thoughts and secrets in a diary they name the Blue Book of Nebo. They both immerse themselves in their love of literature and develop a love for the Welsh language.

This was a gentle, beautiful read that I highly recommend. The audiobook is read by the author herself, and I enjoyed the lilting Welsh accent. It made me wish I could read Welsh. ( )
  mimbza | Apr 7, 2024 |
A 14-year-old boy and his mother survive the end of civilization in Wales in current times. Not as dark as most dystopias. ( )
  mykl-s | Dec 17, 2022 |
At first, the news were not that alarming - bombs went off in American cities. For Rowenna and her son Dylan, tucked in rural Wales, this is half a world away - although she was worried enough to go and buy all the food she could. Then the power went off and never came back. Then the local power plant (or something in that direction) went up and the clouds brought radiation sickness. But this is not where this book starts. That was all in the past, in 2018, when Dylan was 6, when The End came. Now he is 14 and for the last 8 years he had lived with his mother in their isolated house - never meeting anyone besides the neighbors who left in the first months of the new world. For all he knows, the two of them are the last people on Earth (well, not exactly - because there is Mona, his 2 years old sister and he learned a few months ago that that would have required at least one more person to be alive. But he will never ask - because when his mother does not like a question, she closes up - and that hurts).

If one knows anything about Welsh legends, they would recognize what the title of the book is playing on - the Red Book of Hergest and the Black Book of Carmarthen preserved enough of the legends in the same way this book preserves the chronicles of these times (if you do not recognize the reference, Dylan will tell you pretty early in the books). The first chapter starts with Dylan telling us how they found the notebook he is now writing in -- because this whole book is a diary, written by two people - Rowenna and Dylan. Early on, he writes about their now-and-here, she writes about the past - including The End. But that division soon melts away and both of them write about whatever they feel like writing about. And that's how we finally learn what happened - although we never get the full picture - Rowenna never knew the bigger story so we never do either. It is a story of survival and finding the will to continue, to preserve your life. But somewhere in there is also a love song for the Welsh language and literature - because when she is sure that everything is over, Rowenna saves books, despite not being a big reader) - both in English and in Welsh. She even learns to love again her mother tongue - she was reared up speaking Welsh but she stopped using it because her teachers wanted the book Welsh and hers was the lived-in version so she just gave up. The book is full if these almost randomly thrown ideas which make you think about the world we live in.

The short novel (novella really) is heartbreaking at times although in a few places it felt forced - the author was looking for the emotion instead of letting the prose elicit it. And the end managed to surprise me - if I knew it was coming, I would have thought of it was a hopeful end but reading it at the end of the story, it felt like a nightmare made real. I had to stop and think of my reaction to it - it did nor make any sense on the surface. And yet it does - because the story turns on its head the concept of what is normal and good - and makes you wonder if the world we live in is really worth saving if it gets to that.

It is a depressing book on so many levels. The story of survival, of a child growing into an adult overnight and of a mother, who even in that world finds a way to punish is not always an easy read (not that Rowenna is a bad mother but she is a person and getting stuck with someone who depends on you, seeing that someone grow up long before his time takes its toll). But at the same time it is a not so bad way to make the reader look into their own life and figure out what is really important. And to make you slow down and appreciate what you have.

The story's style is deceptively easy - as all of it is written by a boy who learned his language from books and from a woman who never wrote anything since school (and was not a big reader either). So there is some simplicity in the language which may make the whole narrative sound almost shallow. I do not know how that sounded in Welsh but as the book was translated into English by the author, I assume that this was intentional (although I am not that sure about the places where it seemed to slip a bit). But that language sells the story even more than the narrative does - because it fits, you can imagine both Rowenna and her son and you wonder if you could have survived if that happened to you. And when a book makes you think that way, the book did its job (even if it has issues and is not perfect). ( )
  AnnieMod | May 24, 2022 |
Thoughtful, powerful, heartfelt. ( )
  bookwren | Feb 13, 2022 |
Roedd LLyfr Gas Nebo'n nofel hawdd i'w darllen ac ar adegau'n eich tynnu chi ymlaen i ddarllen y bennod nesaf pan oedd pethau eraill yn galw (megis cwsg!)

Roedd o leiaf dau o'r prif gmeriadau'n ddigon crwn i'ch tynnu i fewn i'w byd - ond i mi. roedd eu datbygiad yn anghytbwys ac anorffenedig a'r byd ei hun yn gysgodlen yn hytrach na lle tri-dimensiwn estynedig.

Roedd y gosodiad i'r stori, sef sefyllfa apocoliptig wedi rhyw ddamwain (niwcliar) yn anorffenedig, anwyddonol ac anghredadwy ar adegau. A'r diweddglo'n rhy hawdd - dyfodiad deus ex machina, yn ddiamau.

Efallai nad dyna oedd y pwynt - h.y. fe hybwyd y llyfr yn wreiddiol fel i un i'r ieuenctid (er iddi ennill ddarllenwyr o bob oedran) a theithi'r meddwl ifanc a'u hargyfyngau cydwybod a thensiynau eu hagyffred o berthynasau teuluol a chariadus yw'r cwbl o ddibenion yr awdur - h.y. drama ar lwyfan gyda llenni cefndir shimpyl ond digon da ar gyfer cyfleu y stori?

Ond hyd yn oed ar y telerau hyn, cefais fy siomi, nid yn unig yn niffyg dyfnder a phresenodeb y cymeriadau eraill, ond yng nghig a gwaed y prif gymeriadau hefyd - rhyw wagle neu ddiffyg cytbwysedd yn nhriniaeth yr awdur o'r fam a'i mab y eu hymgais i oroesi - yn gyntaf fel uned ac yn raddol fel dau fydd yn y pendraw yn gorfod dilyn eu rhawd unigol ac unig. Mae diffyg hefyd yn yr 'arallfyd', sef yn yr ymgais a gewch ym mhob llenyddiaeth ffantasi o werth i greu byd creadadwy anghyfarwydd sydd rywsut yn ein dysgu, ein procio neu'n adlewyrchu'n ddifyr o annifyr ar ein byd distadl a ffaeledig ni.

Efallai y byddai'n decach i feddwl am LGN yn fwy fel nofela - neu stori fer estynedig iawn - neu amlinelliad am ddrama (mae hi ar daith eisoes!) a'r ffilm anochel (all fod yn wirioneddol dda yn y dwylo iawn) a ddaw bid siwr.

Dwi eisoes yn dechrau anghofio ei naws, ei chymeriadau a'i stori - yn wahanol er enghraifft i straeon byrion gwyddonias Owain Owain (Y Peiriant Pigmi, Y Dydd Olaf etc) ( )
1 voter CitizenMarc | Mar 3, 2020 |
5 sur 5
Originally published to acclaim in Welsh, this staggering novel collates the alternating accounts of 14-year-old Dylan and his mother, written in the blue notebook of the title. For eight years, ever since the power went out and the old normal disappeared, they've worked to survive in the remote village of Nebo. What Mam misses, Dylan has no use for, being perfectly adapted to the new world and his place in it. A tender, tragic post-apocalyptic story, told with great simplicity and power.
 
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To my friend Allun Jones, who gave me faith in my own voice.
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Mam says that it's best to write like this now.
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Mam isn't a woman who argues - she just closes herself, like a door or a book. (p. 6)
Pwyll is a good name for a hare, I think. The ll is different but still pretty, an unexpected sort of pretty, just like the hare. (p. 27)
She somehow knew when to chatter and when to stay siletn when one of her ladies settled in the chiar. Sometimes people needed to hear endless empt talk about the price of carrots, and the infuriating din of the bin lorry in the morning, and all the shops that were shutting over on the high street in Caernarfon, and how sad it was to see so many empty windows. And sometimes, not often, but more often than you would have thought, she left the air empty, quiet, so that the lady in the chair could let her heavy words fill the silence. (p. 29)
Blood is thicker than water, but there's so much water. (p. 31)
... wars, when important people argued and then got less important people to kill one another. (p. 38)
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"Winner of the 2018 National Eisteddfod Prose Medal and the 2019 Llyfr y Flwyddyn (Wales Book of the Year) After nuclear disaster, Rowenna and her young son, Dylan, are among the rare survivors in rural northwest Wales. Left alone in their isolated hillside cottage, after others have died or abandoned the towns and villages, they must learn new skills in order to remain alive. With no electricity or modern technology they must return to the old ways of living off the land, developing new personal resources. While they become more skilled and stronger, the relationship between mother and son changes in subtle ways, as Dylan must take on adult responsibilities, especially once his baby sister Mona arrives. Despite their close understanding, mother and son have their own secrets, which emerge as in turn they jot down their thoughts and memories in a found notebook. As each reflects on their old life and the events since the disaster which has brought normal, twenty-first century life to an end, their new-found maturity and sense of purpose contrast not only with their old selves but also with new emotional challenges when Mona sickens and dies. In this touching prize-winning and best-selling new novel, Manon Steffan Ros not only explores the human capacity to find new strengths when faced with the need to survive, but also questions the structures and norms of the contemporary world"--

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