Photo de l'auteur

Henry Williamson (1) (1895–1977)

Auteur de Tarka the Otter ( penguin 81)

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Henry Williamson, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

71+ oeuvres 1,855 utilisateurs 23 critiques 2 Favoris

Séries

Œuvres de Henry Williamson

Tarka the Otter ( penguin 81) (1927) 878 exemplaires
Salar the Salmon (1935) 94 exemplaires
The Patriot's Progress (1930) 57 exemplaires
The Dark Lantern (1800) 46 exemplaires
The Henry Williamson Animal Saga (1960) 45 exemplaires
The Beautiful Years (1921) 41 exemplaires
Dandelion Days (1930) 33 exemplaires
How Dear is Life (1954) 32 exemplaires
Donkey Boy (1952) 30 exemplaires
The Golden Virgin (1957) 29 exemplaires
A Test to Destruction (1960) 29 exemplaires
Young Phillip Maddison (1953) 28 exemplaires
The Innocent Moon (1961) 27 exemplaires
Phoenix Generation (1965) 26 exemplaires
Love and the Loveless (1974) 26 exemplaires
The Power of the Dead (1963) 25 exemplaires
It Was the Nightingale (1962) 25 exemplaires
A Fox Under My Cloak (1955) 23 exemplaires
Lucifer Before Sunrise (1967) 23 exemplaires
The Pathway (1928) 23 exemplaires
The Dream of Fair Women (1943) 17 exemplaires
The Old Stag (1926) 16 exemplaires
The Phasian Bird (1950) 16 exemplaires
The Gale of the World (1969) 16 exemplaires
The Scandaroon (1972) 14 exemplaires
The Wet Flanders Plain (1987) 12 exemplaires
Life in a Devon Village (1945) 12 exemplaires
The Story of a Norfolk Farm (1941) 11 exemplaires
Tales of a Devon Village (1944) 9 exemplaires
Christmas Book at Bedtime (2000) 9 exemplaires
The Children of Shallowford (1978) 8 exemplaires
Tales of Moorland and Estuary (1953) 8 exemplaires
A Clear Water Stream (1958) 8 exemplaires
The Ackymals 7 exemplaires
The Sun in the Sands (1945) 7 exemplaires
The Village Book (1930) 7 exemplaires
The Flax of Dream (1935) 5 exemplaires
My Favourite Country Stories (1966) 5 exemplaires
Norfolk Life (1943) 5 exemplaires
The Star Born (1973) 5 exemplaires
Goodbye, west country, (1938) 5 exemplaires
As the Sun Shines (1944) 5 exemplaires
Village Tales (1986) 4 exemplaires
The Lone Swallows (2010) 3 exemplaires
Devon Holiday 2 exemplaires
Sun brothers 2 exemplaires
A Breath of Country Air Part 1 (1990) 2 exemplaires
The Peregrine's Saga 1 exemplaire
Scribbling Lark 1 exemplaire
A Breath of Country Air Part 2 (1991) 1 exemplaire
Days of Wonder (1987) 1 exemplaire
The Trapper's Mates 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Winged Victory (1934) — Tribute and Preface, quelques éditions152 exemplaires
Famous and Curious Animal Stories (1982) — Contributeur — 29 exemplaires
English farming (1941) — Introduction, quelques éditions20 exemplaires
The Country Child (1992) — Contributeur — 10 exemplaires
A Soldier's Diary of the Great War (1929) — Introduction — 4 exemplaires
West Country Short Stories (1949) — Contributeur — 2 exemplaires
Stories for girls — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire
水の誘惑―釣魚文学大全 (1983年) (1983) — Contributeur — 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Tonson, Jacob
Madison, William
Williamson, Harry
Date de naissance
1895-12-01
Date de décès
1977-08-13
Sexe
male
Nationalité
UK
Lieu de naissance
Brockley, London, England
Lieux de résidence
Georgeham, Devon, UK
Études
Colfe's School
Professions
naturalist

Membres

Critiques

Super-dense prose, unrelenting in its exact description. Many things happen, but they're mostly the same things over and over. Admirable writing, but also lots of work required from the reader. I can't imagine what people who don't see pictures in their heads would make of this book.
 
Signalé
judeprufrock | 14 autres critiques | Jul 4, 2023 |
"Pity acts through the imagination, the higher light of the world, and imagination arises from the world of things, as a rainbow from the sun."

Starting with his birth, the book takes us almost day by day through Tarka's life — learning to swim and fish, wrestling and sliding down riverbanks with his sisters and mother, before heading off alone to find himself a mate, around the estuaries of Devon.

This is one of the best known nature novels but its not a sanitised Disneyesque nature. There is beauty is everywhere but there is also danger everywhere. Everything tries to eat everything else and the local farmers and water-bailiffs hunt otters, which they see as vermin. The sub-title of the novel, 'His Joyful Water-Life and Death' , tells us what the inevitable ending will be but beforehand gives a highly realistic insight into an otter’s life, its joys and perils. Williamson spent years tramping the riverways of Devon studying otters so whilst this is fiction its based on fact and close observation.

The writing is beautiful, in particular when Tarka was in the water, I could almost visualise it. Its sometime easy to think of otters as cute fish eating creatures but we mustn't forget that they are carnivores that will eat birds, frogs and other mammals as well. The book was first published in 1927 and thankfully attitudes have changed and despite the ending is neither sad nor depressing. It's a classic for a reason. My only real grumble was the constant use of local slang for many of the creatures that featured, whilst he initially tells us what the proper name is when they reoccurred later on I had forgotten it. The glossary could have been more expansive I felt.

“Time flowed with the sunlight of the still green place. The summer drake-flies, whose wings were as the most delicate transparent leaves, hatched from their cases on the water and danced over the shadowed surface.”
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
PilgrimJess | 14 autres critiques | Apr 23, 2023 |
Classic fiction, otters
 
Signalé
sbodmer | 14 autres critiques | Jan 5, 2023 |
This is the most uncompromisingly "animal" of all animal stories, more like a TV nature documentary than a novel. On the one hand, the writing itself is as beautiful as the place it describes: north Devon with its deep wooded valleys and rich farmland, its high moors where wild ponies graze under huge skies, its headland-fringed coast with the tallest sea-cliffs anywhere in England, are lovingly described by a Londoner who came to know every inch of it. But on the other hand, there's no moral, no "lesson", just life in the raw the way it really is for a wild animal: cubs, parents and mates disappear from the narrative and are simply never mentioned again.
   It's not a book about hunting. None of its otters die of disease or old age, most are killed and most of those by people - by the otter-hunt, or in gin-traps, or cornered and battered to death as "vermin"; yet Williamson's own attitude was to some extent contradictory. He admired the huntsmen themselves for their knowledge of otters and of Nature in general - he got to know them and followed the hunt himself; but in Tarka he also managed to get down on paper, better than almost anyone else I've read, the numbed outrage I feel at senseless cruelty to animals.
   Environmental campaigners such as Rachel Carson have taken inspiration from this book - and, for all I know, Tarka may even have helped to save the otter itself because much has happened since 1927 when it was written. Their numbers declined for decades until otters finally disappeared completely from most of England in the 1960s (due as much to pesticides running into rivers as to hunting) and they even made it into the Red Book as "vulnerable to extinction". But then in 1978 hunting was banned, and in 1981 the landmark Wildlife and Countryside Act was passed into law, with otters as one of the first animals to come under its protection. These days they're making a comeback and the future looks bright.
   Tarka isn't really about all that either though, neither about hunting nor conservation; in fact just for once, refreshingly, here we have a novel which isn't about us at all - and I think maybe that at least partly explains its enduring appeal. It's a story in which humans are peripheral figures, absent altogether for much of the time and only periodically erupting into Tarka's life like just another incomprehensible destructive phenomenon, like storms, like bad luck, like winter. And in the interludes we get glimpses of a different Earth (my favourite passage in the book: Tarka and a raven playing together), the way it must have been throughout almost all its history: no "moral", no "point" to it all, just life.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
justlurking | 14 autres critiques | Jul 4, 2021 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
71
Aussi par
11
Membres
1,855
Popularité
#13,874
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
23
ISBN
173
Langues
4
Favoris
2

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