This Is Happiness
Books | Fiction / Literary
4
Niall Williams
Niall Williams's new novel, Time of the Child, is available now!NAMED A BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY THE WASHINGTON POST and REAL SIMPLEA profound and enchanting new novel from Booker Prize-longlisted author Niall Williams about the loves of our lives and the joys of reminiscing. You don't see rain stop, but you sense it. You sense something has changed in the frequency you've been living and you hear the quietness you thought was silence get quieter still, and you raise your head so your eyes can make sense of what your ears have already told you, which at first is only: something has changed.The rain is stopping. Nobody in the small, forgotten village of Faha remembers when it started; rain on the western seaboard was a condition of living. Now--just as Father Coffey proclaims the coming of electricity--it is stopping. Seventeen-year-old Noel Crowe is standing outside his grandparents' house shortly after the rain has stopped when he encounters Christy for the first time. Though he can't explain it, Noel knows right then: something has changed. This is the story of all that was to follow: Christy's long-lost love and why he had come to Faha, Noel's own experiences falling in and out of love, and the endlessly postponed arrival of electricity--a development that, once complete, would leave behind a world that had not changed for centuries. Niall Williams' latest novel is an intricately observed portrait of a community, its idiosyncrasies and its traditions, its paradoxes and its inanities, its failures and its triumphs. Luminous and otherworldly, and yet anchored with deep-running roots into the earthy and the everyday, This Is Happiness is about stories as the very stuff of life: the ways they make the texture and matter of our world, and the ways they write and rewrite us.
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More Details:
Author
Niall Williams
Pages
400
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Published Date
2019-12-03
ISBN
1635574218 9781635574210
Community ReviewsSee all
"When you look at the reviews for this book it clearly falls into the "beautifully written, coming of age story" camp and the "beautifully written, nothing happens" camp. My experience fell firmly in the latter. At times I definitely found myself lost in the prose and smiling at Williams's way with words as he described daily life and the history of Faha, but then it would just ramble a bit too much and my mind would drift to thoughts of, "but when will something actually happen?" I did finish it because it's hard for me not to, but I pretty much skimmed the last third of the book."
L
Lauren