Anchored in the community of first-, second-, and third-generation Welsh Americans in Utica, New York, during the 1960s, the stories in David Lloyd’s
The Moving of the Water delve into universal concerns: identity, home, religion, language, culture, belonging, personal and national histories, mortality. Unflinching in their portrayal of the traumas and conflicts of fictional Welsh Americans, these stories also embrace multiple communities and diverse experiences in linked, innovative narratives: soldiers fighting in World War I and in Vietnam, the criminal underworld, the poignant struggles of children and adults caught between old and new worlds. The complexly damaged characters of these surprising and affecting stories seek transformation and revelation, healing and regeneration: a sometimes traumatic ‘moving of the water.’
قائمة المحتويات
Acknowledgments
Nos Da
Key
Visitor
Crooked Pie
Eeeeeeee!
Home
Puzzle
Naked
Monkey’s Uncle
Father
Photograph
Transactions
Dreaming of Home
Prodigal Son
Box
Seer
The Moving of the Water
Notes on Welsh Words, Phrases, and Names
عن المؤلف
David Lloyd is Professor of English and Director of the Creative Writing Program at Le Moyne College. His previous books include the novel
Over the Line, the short-story collection
Boys: Stories and a Novella, and the poetry collections
Warriors,
The Gospel According to Frank, and
The Everyday Apocalypse. He lives in upstate New York.