Green: A Caithness Childhood

Green: A Caithness Childhood

by ValerieCarr (Author)

Synopsis

'Initially I wrote Green for my three children who were regularly entertained by tv, videos and computer games. In my childhood I had entertained myself for free. I thought I would just write about six pages of things I did when I was young, but the narrative needed some background and some description and it somehow just grew and grew into Green. So join me in an adventure back in time, and run with me up the strath, listen for bird song, smell the lowers and feel the confusion, the stubbornness, the sadness but mostly the fun of being a child in the country. Taste what it's like to be young again!' This autobiographical account of childhood in the '50s and '60s centres around Latheronwheel, a small village in Caithness. Brimful of anecdote, it is neither slushily sentimental nor dreamily nostalgic, but an evocation of country life and a child's relationship both with adults and nature. Green also covers subjects like education, religion, animals, snow, sea, sunshine, family, monsters, bitter cold, biting sea breezes, indecision and black despair. It is a child's view of the world - a child who despises adult advice, a child who is sensitive to nature, a child who is still green.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 142
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Tuckwell Press Ltd
Published: 27 May 2002

ISBN 10: 1862321043
ISBN 13: 9781862321045

Media Reviews
Her descriptions of Sixties life and fashion, and the angst of teenage years, are priceless . . . although Valerie the teenager disappeared, the little girl within her so obviously remained. This is evident in her atmospheric drawings, and the hugely descriptive quality of her writing. -- Scots Magazine
Author Bio
Valerie Carr, a graduate of Gray's School of Art in Aberdeen, is an artist living in Stonehaven.