The Beach Of Falesá
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Condition: Fair to Good. Jacket: No dust jacket visible. Page Condition: Yellowed/tanning, consistent with age. Markings: Previous owner. Binding: Appears intact. Stickers/Labels: None visible.
A fascinating creative work from one of the twentieth century's most celebrated Welsh poets and writers, The Beach of Falesá presents Dylan Thomas's imaginative screenplay adaptation based on Robert Louis Stevenson's classic short story of the same name. The work transports readers to the sun-drenched South Sea islands, chronicling the morally complex tale of a British trader who arrives on a remote Polynesian island and becomes entangled in deception, colonial corruption, and an unlikely romance with a local woman. Thomas brings his characteristically vivid and lyrical sensibility to Stevenson's original narrative, infusing the dialogue and atmosphere with a dramatic intensity that crackles on the page. Originally written as a film script, the work stands alone as a compelling piece of literature that illustrates Thomas's remarkable versatility beyond his iconic poetry. It remains a unique and rewarding entry in both Thomas's canon and the broader tradition of literary adaptation.
Author: Dylan Thomas
Format: Hardback
Genre: Poetry
Condition remarks:
Condition: Fair to Good. Jacket: No dust jacket visible. Page Condition: Yellowed/tanning, consistent with age. Markings: Previous owner. Binding: Appears intact. Stickers/Labels: None visible.
A fascinating creative work from one of the twentieth century's most celebrated Welsh poets and writers, The Beach of Falesá presents Dylan Thomas's imaginative screenplay adaptation based on Robert Louis Stevenson's classic short story of the same name. The work transports readers to the sun-drenched South Sea islands, chronicling the morally complex tale of a British trader who arrives on a remote Polynesian island and becomes entangled in deception, colonial corruption, and an unlikely romance with a local woman. Thomas brings his characteristically vivid and lyrical sensibility to Stevenson's original narrative, infusing the dialogue and atmosphere with a dramatic intensity that crackles on the page. Originally written as a film script, the work stands alone as a compelling piece of literature that illustrates Thomas's remarkable versatility beyond his iconic poetry. It remains a unique and rewarding entry in both Thomas's canon and the broader tradition of literary adaptation.