Hungry Hill (novel)

Hungry Hill

First UK edition
Author Daphne du Maurier
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Historical novel
Publisher Gollancz (UK)
Doubleday (US)
Publication date
1943
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
OCLC 8830337

Hungry Hill is a novel by prolific British author Daphne du Maurier, published in 1943. It was her seventh novel.[1] There have been 33 editions of the book printed.[2]

This family saga is based on the history of the Irish ancestors of Daphne du Maurier’s friend Christopher Puxley. The family resembles the Puxleys who owned mines in Allihies, a parish in Northern Ireland.

The story spans the century from 1820 to 1920 following five male characters from a family of Anglo-Irish landowners, the Brodricks, who live in a castle called Clonmere in the north of Ireland. It is divided into five sub-books and an epilogue. Each section covers part of the life of an heir. The sections include: Book One: Copper John, 1820 - 1828; Book Two: Greyhound John, 1828 - 1837; Book Three: "Wild Johnnie," 1837 - 1858; Book Four: Henry, 1858 - 1874; Book Five: Hal, 1874 - 1895; Epilogue: The Inheritance, 1920;

The title sometimes is mistakenly thought to refer to Hungry Hill which is the highest peak in the Caha Mountains in County Cork, and du Maurier's description of the Hungry Hill is similar to the physical aspects of that place, but it's location in southern Ireland contradicts other references du Maurier makes to the location being in northern Ireland. The title is in fact an allusion to the curse put on the family by Morty Donovan, arch enemy of patriarch Copper John Brodrick, at the start of the novel, and the fact that the mines seem to "swallow up" the lives of the Brodrick family through five generations, by early death, dissipation and unhappiness.

Many of the place names in the novel are imaginary, and the location is never directly stated to be Ireland, although it can be inferred from several references to "crossing the water" to reach to London, Hal's embarkation from Liverpool in route to Canada, and fighting between British soldiers and the Irish Republican Army in the Epliogue.

The story was made in to a film in 1947 directed by Brian Desmond Hurst[3]

Latest edition

See also

References

  1. Sheila Hodges (2002) Editing Daphne du Maurier, Women's History Review, 11:2, 294, http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/09612020200200322, retrieved 1-17-15
  2. OCLC 8830337. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  3. Hungry Hill (1947) at the Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2008-04-10.

[1] Sheila Hodges (2002) Editing Daphne du Maurier, Women's History Review, 11:2, 294, http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/09612020200200322

External links