Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 8th March 2007
Paperback, 2nd edition
Published: 4th August 2000
Paperback
Published: 18th April 2011
The Soldier's Return
By (Author) Melvyn Bragg
Hodder & Stoughton
Sceptre
4th August 2000
18th May 2000
2nd edition
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
823.914
Winner of WH Smith Annual Literary Award 2000
Paperback
384
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 26mm
310g
Unsentimental, truthful and wonderful Beryl Bainbridge, Independent Books of the Year
When Sam Richardson returns in 1946 from the Forgotten War in Burma to Wigton in Cumbria, he finds the town little changed. But the war has changed him, broadening his horizons as well as leaving him with traumatic memories. In addition, his six-year-old son now barely remembers him, and his wife has gained a sense of independence from her wartime jobs. As all three strive to adjust, the bonds of loyalty and love are stretched to breaking point in this taut, and profoundly moving novel. An outstandingly good novel...utterly credible, utterly compelling, and very enjoyable Allan Massie, Scotsman Deeply felt, beautifully realised John Sutherland, Sunday Times The first Great War came alive in Faulks s Birdsong; the second Great War, and in particular the Burma campaign, comes very much alive in Melvyn Bragg s The Soldier s Return wholly absorbing John Bayley, Evening Standard Sympathetic, touching, infinitely believable...This is a highly accomplished novel D.J. Taylor, Literary Review'Outstandingly good...Must be one of the best English novels of the last ten years. It rings true; its characters matter...utterly credible, utterly compelling, and very enjoyable' -- Scotsman '[He] writes with tremendous empathy...One of the tautest and fiercest of Bragg's fictions' -- Independent 'Sympathetic, touching, infinitely believable...a highly accomplished novel' -- Literary Review 'Strong, straightforward, explicit, evocative' -- Daily Telegraph 'A great achievement' -- Guardian 'Reads like Lawrence...Feels like the book Bragg was born to write' -- Time Out 'His study of a relationship between man and wife in difficulties is brilliantly convincing...A passionately moving novel' -- Financial Times 'His masterpiece' -- Peter Kemp, Books of the Year, Sunday Times
Melvyn Bragg's first novel, FOR WANT OF A NAIL, was published in 1965 and since then his novels have included THE HIRED MAN, for which he won the Time/Life Silver Pen Award, WITHOUT A CITY WALL, winner of the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, CREDO and THE MAID OF BUTTERMERE. He has also written several works of non-fiction including SPEAK FOR ENGLAND, an oral history of the twentieth century, and RICH, a biography of Richard Burton. He was born in 1939 and educated at Wigton's Nelson Tomlinson School and at Oxford where he read history. He is controller of Arts at LWT and President of the National Campaign for the Arts, and in 1998 he was made a life peer. He lives in London and Cumbria.