None but the Lonely Heart (novel) explained

None but the Lonely Heart
Author:Richard Llewellyn
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Genre:Drama
Publisher:Michael Joseph
Release Date:1943
Media Type:Print

None but the Lonely Heart is a 1943 novel by the British writer Richard Llewellyn. It focuses on the life of Ernie Motts, who narrates the story from his own perspective, a wide boy from London. It was published four years after Llewellyn's best-known work, the Wales-set How Green Was My Valley.

Film adaptation

In 1944 it was made into a film of the same title by the Hollywood studio RKO Pictures. Directed by Clifford Odets it starred Cary Grant as Ernie Mott along with Ethel Barrymore, Barry Fitzgerald and June Duprez.[1] It was noted for its unusual subject matter, as most Hollywood films of the period portrayed Britain in a much more positive light.[2]

Bibliography

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Notes and References

  1. Goble p.288
  2. Glance p.163-64