Nuni

Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book Nuni by John Howard Griffin, Wings Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Howard Griffin ISBN: 9781609401443
Publisher: Wings Press Publication: October 1, 2010
Imprint: Wings Press Language: English
Author: John Howard Griffin
ISBN: 9781609401443
Publisher: Wings Press
Publication: October 1, 2010
Imprint: Wings Press
Language: English

After John Howard Griffin's escape from Nazi-occupied France, he was shipped to the South Pacific, where he was stationed as an isolated observer in the Solomon Islands. That experience led to his second novel, Nuni (1956). As in his first novel, The Devil Rides Outside, an American professor is confronted by an alien reality. In Nuni, that reality is a "primitive," almost Neolithic society. Yet, the professor's intellectual accomplishments are useless here, his place in both family and civilized society meaningless. He learns to cope, not so much in terms of survival as in finding a new meaning to his life. The Chicago Tribune described Nuni as "an extraordinarily interesting account of a white man's life in a savage island village of the Pacific-the greater part of the novel is concerned with the growth in the narrator, a knowledge of as well as affection for the curiously innocent people." The Dallas Times-Herald wrote: "The two greatest novels of the past decade are William Faulkner's A Fable, and John Howard Griffin's Nuni."

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

After John Howard Griffin's escape from Nazi-occupied France, he was shipped to the South Pacific, where he was stationed as an isolated observer in the Solomon Islands. That experience led to his second novel, Nuni (1956). As in his first novel, The Devil Rides Outside, an American professor is confronted by an alien reality. In Nuni, that reality is a "primitive," almost Neolithic society. Yet, the professor's intellectual accomplishments are useless here, his place in both family and civilized society meaningless. He learns to cope, not so much in terms of survival as in finding a new meaning to his life. The Chicago Tribune described Nuni as "an extraordinarily interesting account of a white man's life in a savage island village of the Pacific-the greater part of the novel is concerned with the growth in the narrator, a knowledge of as well as affection for the curiously innocent people." The Dallas Times-Herald wrote: "The two greatest novels of the past decade are William Faulkner's A Fable, and John Howard Griffin's Nuni."

More books from Wings Press

Cover of the book The Witching Voice by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Heart's Many Doors: American Poets Respond to Metka Krašovec's Images Responding to Emily Dickinson by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book King of the Chicanos by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Harbingers of Books to Come: A Texan's Literary Life by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Indios by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Devil's Tango by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Outside the Margins by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Dying Unfinished by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Apology to a Whale by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Strange Angels by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Among the Angels of Memory by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Bluebonnets, Firewheels, and Brown-eyed Susans, or, Poems New and Used From the Bandera Rag and Bone Shop by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Soul Whispers III by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book The Human Condition: New Poems by John Howard Griffin
Cover of the book Three Tides by John Howard Griffin
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy