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A Child’s Christmas In Wales and Five Poems

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First recorded in February of 1952, this remastered recording of Dylan Thomas reading A Child’s Christmas in Wales recalls all of the sights, smells, and sounds of a long-ago Christmas.

Thomas’s wonderful recollection of this holiday in the seaside town of his youth is captured in this vivid performance. Also included are five poems selected and read by Dylan Thomas, including arguably his most well-known Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night.

Includes:
A Child’s Christmas in Wales
Fern Hill
Do Not Go Gentle Into
That Good Night
In the White Giant’s Thigh
Ballad of the
Long-Legged Bait
Ceremony After a Fire Raid

Product Features

  • Used Book in Good Condition

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3 thoughts on “A Child’s Christmas In Wales and Five Poems

  1. An old tradition Growing up, my father had a copy of the original vinyl recording of this from the 1950’s. Every Christmas it came out and was played, and now I can’t think of Christmas without it. After being unavailable for decades, I’m delighted to see this record once again available. Few people know that Dylan Thomas gained fame in his lifetime as a radio personality, and the dry, droll voice of his takes his fantastic prose and breathes a life into it that the simple words themselves cannot…

  2. Gorgeous voice I had read excerpts of A Child’s Christmas in Wales and loved what I had read, but it wasn’t until I heard the entire tale in Dylan’s voice on NPR that I completely fell in love with it. Dylan’s voice is warm, deep, slightly wry, and rolling. 

  3. Recapturing the past we never knew Christmas so often disappoints us. And why not? How could it ever live up to the sappy and maudlin presentations it suffers so often on TV, in the movies, even in commercials! Along comes Dylan Thomas (well he came along a while ago) and captures elements of the holiday that we can still live today. There is a town shut up against the cold with the occasional hardy soul braving the elements. There are families, rich in generations, sharing a day punctuated more by the telling of tales than…

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