ChatterBank2 mins ago
John Wyndham - The Chrysalids
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ program mes/b01 lk59d
I remember reading this when I was about 13, and being hugely impressed. We had been reading the Day of the Triffids at school, I was very keen on reading everything else that Wyndham wrote. Its coming up this Sunday on Radio 4 Extra, at 18:00, if anyone else is interested.
Sure to be worth a listen !
I remember reading this when I was about 13, and being hugely impressed. We had been reading the Day of the Triffids at school, I was very keen on reading everything else that Wyndham wrote. Its coming up this Sunday on Radio 4 Extra, at 18:00, if anyone else is interested.
Sure to be worth a listen !
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No best answer has yet been selected by mikey4444. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.CrapAtCryptics..........personally, I don't think he ever wrote a dud book in his life !
If I had to choose a favourite, it would be between Triffids and Chrysalids.
Chrysalids is very well spoken of by the critics :::::
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/The_C hrysali ds
What great books we read in school in the 50's and 60's ! My other favourite was "The Searchers"
If I had to choose a favourite, it would be between Triffids and Chrysalids.
Chrysalids is very well spoken of by the critics :::::
https:/
What great books we read in school in the 50's and 60's ! My other favourite was "The Searchers"
John Wyndham is my all-time favourite author. I went through all his books in the 60s, and listened to this story when it was first on the radio a year or so ago. I can't say I have a favourite, they are so different, but perhaps The Midwich Cuckoos might have the edge. If you read HG Wells, JW uses the method that he sometimes uses, the stories are written mainly in the first person. I have always wondered whether he JW was influenced by HGW.
Mikey - who wrote The Searchers? Haven't heard of that.
Mikey - who wrote The Searchers? Haven't heard of that.
I read Day of the Trffids when I was quite young, and I too became smitten by the Wyndham Bug and read all his novels and short stories. I've forgotten some, but I seem to remember finding *Jizzle very funny (short story).
*Warning: don't google it, it now has a questionable slang meaning.
I would put The Kraken Wakes, and The Midwich Cuckoos (filmed as Village of the Damned) near the top as well.
*Warning: don't google it, it now has a questionable slang meaning.
I would put The Kraken Wakes, and The Midwich Cuckoos (filmed as Village of the Damned) near the top as well.
hellywelly...here it is :::
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/The_S earcher s_(film )
I think we read the book in school because of the massive success of the John Ford film, rather the merits of the book, good though the book is.
If you read the link, you can see that the book was probably based on a real life case in 1836. The Comanches had a habit of taking slaves as captives, and its unlikely that this was an isolated incident.
Great film, as all John Ford's are and a worthwhile book to read.
I can also remember reading the Kon-Tiki book, by Thor Heyerdahl ::
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/The_K on-Tiki _Expedi tion:_B y_Raft_ Across_ the_Sou th_Seas
Actually, I found a second hand book of the above in our local Co-op, only last week and its on my bedside table, ready to go ( with about 10 others of course, so it will have to wait its turn ! )
https:/
I think we read the book in school because of the massive success of the John Ford film, rather the merits of the book, good though the book is.
If you read the link, you can see that the book was probably based on a real life case in 1836. The Comanches had a habit of taking slaves as captives, and its unlikely that this was an isolated incident.
Great film, as all John Ford's are and a worthwhile book to read.
I can also remember reading the Kon-Tiki book, by Thor Heyerdahl ::
https:/
Actually, I found a second hand book of the above in our local Co-op, only last week and its on my bedside table, ready to go ( with about 10 others of course, so it will have to wait its turn ! )
Eccles...I can see how "Chocky" would work rather well on the Radio !
Actually, Wyndham wrote some other Sci-Fi books, but under another name, but I haven't been able to track any down in second-hand bookshops. I am due for a trip to Hay-on-Wye later in the spring, so if I can't find them there ........ !
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/John_ Wyndham #Posthu mously_ publish ed_nove ls
Actually, Wyndham wrote some other Sci-Fi books, but under another name, but I haven't been able to track any down in second-hand bookshops. I am due for a trip to Hay-on-Wye later in the spring, so if I can't find them there ........ !
https:/
Thanks for that, mikey. I never read Wyndham at school, but discovered him later. Aa couple of years ago I started to re-read all his output and I was amazed how much I still enjoyed them and how relevant they all are. I even had to buy a copy of the Chrysalids It's an absolute cracker! IMO. I'' be listening.