Audiobook13 hours
A String in the Harp
Written by Nancy Bond
Narrated by Barbara Caruso
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
4/5
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About this audiobook
This absorbing tale of time travel is a fascinating way for young adults to learn about the culture and history of Wales. After Peter Morgan's family moves from a New England college town to a Welsh village, he discovers a mysterious, ancient object that whisks him back in time to sixth-century Wales.
Author
Nancy Bond
Nancy Bond is the author of a number of books for young readers, including The Voyage Begun, a Boston Globe-Horn Book Award Honor Book; A Place to Come Back To, an American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults and a Booklist Editor's Choice; and Truth to Tell. She wrote after attending library school in a Welsh town outside of Aberstwyth, the book's setting. She lives in Concord, Massachusetts.
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Reviews for A String in the Harp
Rating: 3.82000001 out of 5 stars
4/5
100 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A perfect blend of fantasy and realism.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A boy visiting Wales while his father has a visiting teaching position there finds Taliesin's harp key. The key somehow shows Peter events in Taliesin's life, as he (Peter) struggles to come to terms with being away from home and the tensions between him and his father and sisters. It's a lovely tale, both the story of the Morgan family and the bits about Taliesin in the past. I particularly enjoyed the homey feel to their interactions with their Welsh neighbors and descriptions of the countryside. However, Peter's sister, Jen, through whose view much of the modern plot was told, was irritating and not at all likable. Also, the story seemed to get bogged down somehow in the middle and the going was painfully slow for a good while. Could have been the narrator (I listened to an audio version); I may have had a better go of it in print.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This won a Newbery award in the '70s, but it is not a book for the ages. You could make a pretty rowdy drinking game out of this book, if you drank whenever David, the father, known by his first name, smiles "ruefully" to indicate that he knows that even though he is an adult he has not got all the answers, or whenever Jen, one of the POV characters, speaks "drily". It is reminiscent of "A Wrinkle in Time", because the family is essentially well off and the members of the family are all well-disposed toward each other, somehow. There is, in each case, an injury to the family, in one, a mother is dead and in another the father has gone missing. But these injuries affect only the feelings of the characters, and otherwise do not upset their lives. There is some terrible philosophizing in which people assert that they may not believe what Peter is telling them, but they believe _Peter_. They believe that Peter sincerely believes something which they know is completely untrue, and so everything is OK?It's clear that the author really enjoyed her stay in Wales, and it is nice that she was able to write about it. The same thing happened to Lloyd Alexander, and that's great, because I really like his books. But the only value of this book to me was it reminded me of how powerfully novels can work on young childrens' minds to make them believe pretty dumb things, i.e, that is right and proper for parents and children to believe, think, and act like they do in these books.I would say that like so many books from the 70s this describes a Wales that is quite gone. There are probably no doughty Welsh shepherds anywhere in Wales any more, it just doesn't pay enough.The character of Taliesin as he appears to Peter is distant, but actually quite interesting. But the events in his world had little bearing on the events in the modern world.Jen calls the "laundromat" the "washeteria".
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I liked the part of the book that was in the present, but when they went back in time I found it hard to follow
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I loved this book and found myself bitterly regretting not having read it when I was 12. It is the perfect book for the 12-year-old me, but it was also pretty great for the 44-year-old me. Bond weaves her version of Taliesin the Bard's story with the story of 3 modern kids trying to come to grips with their mother's death and their move to Wales from the US. One of the kids finds the key to Taliesin's harp and is granted the ability to see the story of the bard's life. Juxtaposed with these otherworldly visions is the quotidian life in a small Welsh town. Masterfully done. Highly recommended to those of you who missed it the first time around. This would be a good book to broaden the horizons of the Harry Potter kids, I think.