Gold (Rhodes novel) explained

Gold
Border:yes
Author:Dan Rhodes
Cover Artist:XIAO at www.nthcreative.co.uk
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Publisher:Canongate
Release Date:2007
Media Type:Print & eBook
Pages:198
Isbn:1-84195-953-7

Gold is a novel by British author Dan Rhodes published in March 2007 by Canongate. It won the inaugural Clare Maclean Prize for Scottish Fiction and has since been published in five other languages: Spanish, Danish, Finnish, Dutch, Norwegian.[1] It was also one of the 'best books of 2007' according to critics at The Independent.[2] It was controversially shortlisted as a contender for the Greatest Welsh novel, even though the writer is English and the novel had previously won the Clare Mclean Prize for Scottish fiction .[3]

Plot introduction

Set in a coastal village in Pembrokeshire, the novel concerns Miyuki Woodward, a young Welsh-Japanese woman who spends a month every winter staying in a nearby cottage, away from her female partner Grindl (with whom she runs a decorating business), as a lesson in not taking each other for granted. Her appearance in the local pub is welcomed by all, but this year she becomes more involved in the local community than usual; the gold in the title referring to her impulsive gold spray-painting of a prominent boulder on a nearby beach, which soon attracts the attention of the local police.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gold. 2010-01-05.
  2. Web site: The best books of 2007. . 2007-12-30.
  3. Web site: The Greatest Welsh Novel . 2021-03-01.