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Richard Llewellyn

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Richard Llewellyn Veteran

Birth
Wales
Death
30 Nov 1983 (aged 76)
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Famous writer

Richard Dafydd Vivian Llewellyn Lloyd ), better known by his pen name Richard Llewellyn, was a British novelist.

Real name Vivian Lloyd was born of Welsh parents in Hendon, Middlesex in 1906. Only after his death was it discovered that his claim that he was born in St. Davids, West Wales was false.

Several of his novels dealt with a Welsh theme, the best-known being How Green Was My Valley (1939), which won international acclaim and was made into a classic Hollywood film. It immortalised the way of life of the South Wales Valleys coal mining communities, where Llewellyn spent a small amount of time with his grandfather. Three sequels followed. In the U.S., Llewellyn won the National Book Award for favourite novel of 1940, voted by members of the American Booksellers Association.

He lived a peripatetic life, travelling widely throughout his life. Before World War II, he spent periods working in hotels, wrote a play, worked as a coal miner and produced his best known novel. During World War II, he rose to the rank of Captain in the Welsh Guards. Following the war, he worked as a journalist, covering the Nuremberg Trials, and then as a screenwriter for MGM. Late in his life, he lived in Eilat, Israel.

Protagonists who assume new identities, often because they are transplanted into foreign cultures, are a recurring element in Llewellyn's novels, including a spy adventure (Edmund Trothe) that extends through several volumes.

Llewellyn married twice: his first wife was Nona Sonstenby, whom he married in 1952 and divorced in 1968, and his second wife was Susan Heimann, whom he married in 1974.

Richard Llewellyn died on 30 November 1983.

publications:

How Green Was My Valley (1939)
None but the Lonely Heart (1943)
A Few Flowers for Shiner (1950)
A Flame for Doubting Thomas (1954)
Sweet Witch (1955)
Mr. Hamish Gleave (1956)
The Flame of Hercules (1957)
Warden of the Smoke and Bells (1958)
Chez Pavan (1959)
Up into the Singing Mountain (1960)
A Man in a Mirror (1964)
Sweet Morn of Judas' Day (1965)
Down Where the Moon is Small (1966)
Bride of Israel My Love (1973)
Hill of Many Dreams (1974)
Green, Green My Valley Now (1975)
At Sunrise, the Rough Music (1976)
Tell Me Now and Again (1977)
A Night of Bright Stars (1979)
I Stand on a Quiet Shore (1982)
Edmund Trothe series

End of the Rug (1969)
But We Didn't Get the Fox (1970)
White Horse to Banbury Cross (1972)
The Night is a Child (1974)
Famous writer

Richard Dafydd Vivian Llewellyn Lloyd ), better known by his pen name Richard Llewellyn, was a British novelist.

Real name Vivian Lloyd was born of Welsh parents in Hendon, Middlesex in 1906. Only after his death was it discovered that his claim that he was born in St. Davids, West Wales was false.

Several of his novels dealt with a Welsh theme, the best-known being How Green Was My Valley (1939), which won international acclaim and was made into a classic Hollywood film. It immortalised the way of life of the South Wales Valleys coal mining communities, where Llewellyn spent a small amount of time with his grandfather. Three sequels followed. In the U.S., Llewellyn won the National Book Award for favourite novel of 1940, voted by members of the American Booksellers Association.

He lived a peripatetic life, travelling widely throughout his life. Before World War II, he spent periods working in hotels, wrote a play, worked as a coal miner and produced his best known novel. During World War II, he rose to the rank of Captain in the Welsh Guards. Following the war, he worked as a journalist, covering the Nuremberg Trials, and then as a screenwriter for MGM. Late in his life, he lived in Eilat, Israel.

Protagonists who assume new identities, often because they are transplanted into foreign cultures, are a recurring element in Llewellyn's novels, including a spy adventure (Edmund Trothe) that extends through several volumes.

Llewellyn married twice: his first wife was Nona Sonstenby, whom he married in 1952 and divorced in 1968, and his second wife was Susan Heimann, whom he married in 1974.

Richard Llewellyn died on 30 November 1983.

publications:

How Green Was My Valley (1939)
None but the Lonely Heart (1943)
A Few Flowers for Shiner (1950)
A Flame for Doubting Thomas (1954)
Sweet Witch (1955)
Mr. Hamish Gleave (1956)
The Flame of Hercules (1957)
Warden of the Smoke and Bells (1958)
Chez Pavan (1959)
Up into the Singing Mountain (1960)
A Man in a Mirror (1964)
Sweet Morn of Judas' Day (1965)
Down Where the Moon is Small (1966)
Bride of Israel My Love (1973)
Hill of Many Dreams (1974)
Green, Green My Valley Now (1975)
At Sunrise, the Rough Music (1976)
Tell Me Now and Again (1977)
A Night of Bright Stars (1979)
I Stand on a Quiet Shore (1982)
Edmund Trothe series

End of the Rug (1969)
But We Didn't Get the Fox (1970)
White Horse to Banbury Cross (1972)
The Night is a Child (1974)

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