The Beacon (novel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Beacon
TheBeacon.jpg
First edition
AuthorSusan Hill
Cover artistGetty Images
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
PublisherChatto and Windus
Publication date
02 Oct 2008
Media typePrint & ebook
Pages160
ISBN0-7011-8340-3

The Beacon, is a novel by English author Susan Hill, first published in 2008 by Chatto and Windus and in paperback the following year by Vintage Books.[1]

Plot introduction[]

The four Prime children grow up in a bleak North Country farmhouse called 'The Beacon'; Colin and Berenice marry locally, May, the central character of the novel went to university in London but returns within a year. Only quiet, watchful Frank escapes to become a journalist on Fleet Street. But then he publishes a successful novel about his childhood which throws the family into turmoil...

Reception[]

  • Joanna Briscoe in The Guardian described it as a "novel of great structural and stylistic control" and as being "an almost perfect little literary novel outside any genre. A cross-generational family story barely longer than a novella, it possesses the light tug of menace and almost invisible haze of tension that characterise Hill's ghost stories, yet there is nothing supernatural about this tale of a farming family grounded in the seasons. The slippery nature of memory is what casts an atmosphere of unease over the novel".[2]
  • in The Telegraph writes "this short book is richly satisfying. Hill's craftsmanship is masterly. We are always aware of the farming backdrop: the book begins with a superb evocation of rural hardship, whose inexorable rhythms read like pared-down Thomas Hardy." and goes on to describe it as "a little masterpiece".[3]
  • The Times said it was "a moving, evocative and rewarding novel".[4]

Radio Dramatisation[]

The novel was dramatised for BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour Drama, broadcast in five 15-minute episodes from March 22–26, 2010.[5]

Publication history[]

  • 2008, UK, Chatto & Windus, ISBN 0-7011-8340-3, Pub date 02 Oct 2008, Hardback
  • 2009, UK, Vintage Books, ISBN 0-09-952695-6, Pub date 01 Oct 2009, Paperback

[6]

References[]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""