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The Dig

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This is a searing short novel, built of the interlocking fates of a badger-baiter and a disconsolate farmer, unfolding in a stark rural setting where man, animal, land and weather are at loggerheads. Their two paths converge with tragic inevitability. Jones writes of the physiology of grief and the isolation of loss with brilliance, and about the simple rawness of animal existence with a naturalist's unblinking eye. His is a pared-down prose of resonant simplicity and occasional lushness. His writing about ducks and dogs and cows is axe-sharp. There is not a whiff of the bucolic pastoral or the romanticized sod here. This is a real rural ride. It is short, but crackles with latent compressed energy that makes it swell to fill more space than at first glance it occupies.

159 pages, Hardcover

First published January 2, 2014

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2778 people want to read

About the author

Cynan Jones

21 books361 followers
Cynan Jones was born in 1975 near Aberaeron, Wales where he now lives and works.

He is the author of five short novels, The Long Dry, Everything I Found on the Beach, Bird, Blood, Snow, The Dig, and Cove.

He has been longlisted and shortlisted for numerous international prizes and won a Society of Authors Betty Trask Award (2007), a Jerwood Fiction Uncovered Prize (2014), the Wales Book of the Year Fiction Prize (2015) and the BBC National Short Story Award (2017).

His work has been published in more than twenty countries, and short stories have appeared on BBC Radio 4 and in a number of anthologies and publications including Granta Magazine and The New Yorker. He also wrote the screenplay for an episode of the BAFTA-winning crime drama Hinterland, and Three Tales, a collection of stories for children.

The Independent on Sunday declared "There is no doubt that Jones is one of the most talented writers in Britain” and he is frequently
acknowledged as one of the most exciting voices of his generation.

His most recent work, Stillicide, is a collection of twelve stories commissioned by BBC Radio 4 that aired over the summer 2019.

He is also responsible for 'The Fart'.

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35 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 333 reviews
Profile Image for Paul.
Author 127 books11.8k followers
January 13, 2024
I was totally entranced by this book. Brutal, haunting, beautiful.

REREAD 1/12-1/13. Even more brutal, haunting, and beautiful on the re-read.
Profile Image for Hugh.
1,293 reviews49 followers
April 25, 2017
A stark, uncompromising and poetic novella which documents the hard lives of two solitary men in Welsh sheep country.

Daniel is a sheep farmer, coping alone with lambing after his wife has been killed in an accident. His story is interwoven with that of "the big man", who operates beyond the law as a badger baiter. Both of these stories are told in simple and unsentimental language that retains a beauty and a poetic precision. The two men's paths eventually collide in a brutal conclusion the precise nature of which is left unsaid.

Jones is clearly a very promising writer, and this book promises to remain in the mind. I knew nothing of his work before picking up this book, but I am very glad I did.
Profile Image for Teresa.
1,492 reviews
January 30, 2016
Hoje, tinha decidido não sair de casa. Mas, enquanto tomava o café da manhã, pus-me a cirandar pelos sites das livrarias e caí na Cova. A sinopse aliciante e uma média superior a 4 estrelas no Goodreads fez-me correr para a rua (eu sou esquisita, sim). A livraria não o tinha; massacrei tanto o vendedor para que o procurasse bem que o coitado, para que eu o deixasse em paz, me disse que só indo a Coimbra. Finalmente convencida de que não tinham o livro escondido, corri para outra livraria e, ah! Achei!
Aproveitei para ir à padaria comprar pão; enquanto esperava a minha vez, tirei-o do saco, comecei a lê-lo e...tive de ir buscar uma nova senha.
Terminei-o agora (já não estou na padaria) e só me anima a esperança de que os outros quatro livros que comprei (para atenuar o desgosto de a primeira livraria não ter A Cova) sejam, pelo menos um bocadinho, mais interessantes.

Para quem aguentou ler a história da minha vida de hoje, e quiser saber porque me desiludiu tanto este livro (que provavelmente foi porque não percebi nada), segue uma pequena descrição do que "vi".
Dois vizinhos que vivem no campo:
- Daniel que tenta sobreviver ao desgosto pela morte da mulher, mantendo a sua rotina de criador de ovelhas, principalmente de parteiro.
- O homem grande que se dedica à caça de texugos para serem usados em lutas e que torturam de uma forma abominável. Quero acreditar que este tipo de jogos, a que os homens se dedicam, só existe na imaginação de Cynan Jones.

Um dos motivos que me fez interessar por este livro foi ter lido na contra-capa que "contém ecos de Cormac McCarthy" (por quem sou louca). O único "som" que ouvi foi, no princípio de um capítulo: ", e os produtos de limpeza, e a graxa, e a pá do lixo, e a escova, e a caixa de nozes, e as dobradiças,...". Cormac faz música quando utiliza, repetidamente, vírgula com e mas não é a tirar as compras do saco...

Talvez o livro até seja bom e eu não tenha gostado, apenas, pela agressividade para com os animais, a única coisa que me custa tolerar na literatura.
Profile Image for Paula Mota.
1,662 reviews561 followers
March 5, 2022
3,5*
#dewithon2022

O campo não é apenas o sítio bucólico dos folhetos turísticos, bem sei, sendo neta de agricultores e tendo percebido muito nova que animais que eu achava amorosos, como as toupeiras, eram considerados uma ameaça numa horta. Ainda assim, se eu soubesse do nível de crueldade contra os animais que há neste livro, acho que não teria começado por ele para conhecer Cynan Jones, um autor galês que me despertava o interesse há muito tempo.
Daniel é um criador de ovelhas que perdeu a mulher repentinamente e ainda não se habituou sequer à ideia de já não a ter ao seu lado.

Parecia ser um sinal, por a conhecer tão bem, o facto de conseguir tão facilmente imaginá-la velha, da mesma forma que conseguia recordá-la enquanto criança, como se ele fosse capaz de a ver nos dois extremos da vida, como se a conseguisse ver completamente. Mas não a conseguia imaginar morta. Ele fechara a porta do quarto. Sabia que, a certa altura, o cheiro dela se dissiparia e desapareceria.

Nas imediações, gravita o homem grande, exterminador e caçador de animais protegidos por lei, como o texugo, que captura também para lutas ilegais com cães. Foram partes cuja violência posso apenas imaginar, visto que tive de passá-las à frente.
Em “A Cova” o tema do luto e da fragilidade da vida é explorado de forma opressiva e ominosa, com uma tensão latente entre homem/homem e homem/animal que desde a primeira página se sente não só que é impossível acabar bem, como também pode acabar precipitadamente, a qualquer instante.

Sentiu a ombreira da porta sob a sua mão e esfregou a madeira gasta ao mesmo tempo que descalçava os sapatos. Há muito que sentia aquela necessidade de pousar a mão nas coisas – de as sentir, como se fossem pontos de referência. A ombreira da porta, a pedra áspera no canto do alpendre, o velho parapeito de ardósia a caminho dos redis.
Profile Image for Doug H.
286 reviews
November 26, 2015
A modern classic. Pared to the essentials. Dark and poetic. If I were teaching a course in literature, I would include this novel in my syllabus. It's all here: symbolism, foreshadowing, mythological archetypes, allegory. It's a brutal and depressing tale (more so than anything I've read in recent memory), but it is deepened and lifted beyond mere horror by the author's firm control and underlying sensitivity and the karmic retribution in the epilogue delivers the final stroke. Genius.
Profile Image for Pedro.
825 reviews331 followers
July 17, 2025
Después de un primer capítulo que es un golpe a la mandíbula, Daniel continúa, a pesar de su pena, con sus tareas de la granja, lleno de presagios. En forma paralela se desarrolla la vida del hombre corpulento, que se dedica a sacar tejones de sus cuevas, con alguna escena bastante brutal.

El tejón (badger) existe en la mayor parte de Gran Bretaña, y está considerada una especie protegida; en Gales se otorgan licencias para su captura y eventual sacrificio en caso de enfermedad transmisible (tuberculosis) o cuando su proliferación descontrolada comienza a amenazar los cultivos y cría de animales pequeños de las granjas.

La novela se desarrolla en el estilo austero que ya le he conocido al autor, en su novela Tiempo sin lluvia. Pero en este caso, me ha parecido que no logra el mismo nivel dramático, y que las historias parecen un poco disociadas.

El final nos permite hacer algunas conjeturas sobre lo ocurrido en la última parte de la historia, y que no son mencionadas.

Un buen libro, y un autor galés que merece ser tomado en cuenta.
Profile Image for Alan.
Author 15 books191 followers
June 10, 2014
wonderful. A Welsh Cormac McCarthy.

Jones has a firm but poetic grip on his narrative, which follows the (mis)fortunes of a grieving farmer and a badger-baiter in an isolated part of Wales. Life and death are unsentimentally portrayed, grass, sheep, dogs, rats, humans all treated the same really; although it is impossible not to empathise with Daniel, the farmer as he struggles to keep up with his chores and thinks of his wife. Even the brutal badger baiter evinces sympathy (from me anyway) in the way he stands outside society, tough on the outside but inwardly panicky as the police move in. The writing is pared down, but occasionally lush (hence the Cormac McCarthy comparison: particularly 'The Road' because the world is sometimes filtered through the perception of a boy). Here’s a sample, from when they've been digging into a badger's sett:

They sent the bitch in and Jip came up. He looked like he was grinning. His mouth was open and flecked with spit. The dog was exhausted and thirsty but gleamed with the event somehow and when they took off the box and collar, steam came into the morning air off his body. The boy was confused that they ignored the thick obvious blood that came out of the Patterdale and spread down its throat.

The boy kept looking at the exhausted bleeding stubborn dog. The fresh blood seemed a synthetic colour against the dun-green slope.


That'll probably convince you one way or the other.

Profile Image for Laura.
882 reviews320 followers
April 12, 2020
Not my favorite by the author but a very worthy read. More plot driven then the other two I have read. A little more violent than the past reads of his. I will say his descriptions of lambing are spot on. Don’t even begin to think cute and cuddly. I had a learning curve on one aspect of the plot and I’m not sure I completely understood. Started with Cove, next The Long Dry and finished with The Dig. To me this was the perfect sequence. The Long Dry my favorite.
Profile Image for Alexander.
161 reviews33 followers
February 25, 2021
2-3 Sterne.
Arg plump geratene Erzählung vom Kampf Gut gegen Böse.
Profile Image for Justin Griffiths-Bell.
39 reviews4 followers
March 18, 2014
This is a powerful book by a class writer with a pitch-perfect ear for the sound of the language.

Revolving around twin narratives, it is a study of loss and isolation, focusing on two characters, each a counterpoint to the other; one, a farmer, a brooding thinker, lost and cut adrift, becoming dimly aware of the world shutting off before him; the other, a rat-catcher and badger baiter, a perennial stranger, brooding still more darkly, disconnected. Each suffers apart in a way that’s entirely different to the other. Daniel, the farmer, is a creator, nurturing life, caring, a husband, a man,in tune to the rhythms that the natural world impresses upon man, and the rhythms of his marriage, in a system that worked in its particular unique beauty. The big man, he has no name except this, lives alone and stands outside, antipathetic to the society and people, haunted and uncertain, and in all, but stature, wholly misnamed.

This novel is brutal and at the same time warm, breathless but with a quality of stillness. It is far, far bigger than its 156 pages.
Profile Image for Alice-Elizabeth (Prolific Reader Alice).
1,163 reviews164 followers
March 2, 2020
I'm definitely in the minority here by saying that The Dig fell a little underwhelming, but also quite violent too. Told from multiple POVs, we have a farmer mourning the loss of his wife and another man who is involved in the act of badger-baiting. Towards the end of the book, both of them come together in shocking circumstances. It's a real dog eat dog kind of situation. Yet even though the story layout was clear and easy to read, I really struggled to determine what was going on with the characters and the surroundings they were in. The content doesn't hold back on animal cruelty, so this triggered me a little. I wanted to read some more Welsh literature. This one sadly wasn't for me!
Profile Image for Moira Macfarlane.
862 reviews103 followers
July 17, 2018
It's a tender and brutal story, harsh. Cynan Jones writes the most intense short novels and has a naturalistic writing style, never romanticising life, but there is passion in the way he describes the landscape with it's colours, textures and scents. I slow my pace, feel spellbound, his writing resonates. 
I've read Cove too and am pretty sure I want to read his other books as well.

"The scent of her was in the room and it almost choked him to understand how vital to him this was; how he could never understand her need for his own smell, could not even understand how she could find it on him under the animal smells, the carbolic, the tractor oil and bales and all the things he could pick out on his own hands. He had this idea of smells layering themselves over him, like paint on a stone wall, and again he has this sense of extraordinary resilient tiredness. He wondered what isolated, essential smell she found on him, knew the mammalian power of this from the way pups would stumble blindly to their mother’s teat, the way a ewe would butt a lamb that wasn’t hers. In tbhe shock of birthing, all that first recognition would be in that smell. They would take the skin sometimes of a dead lamb and tie it on an orphan like a coat in the hope that the mother who had lost her lamb would accept and raise it as her own."
Profile Image for Kirk Smith.
234 reviews89 followers
December 4, 2016
This is such a strange story and with such startling contrasts. Love loss and tenderness, Pursuit abuse and savagery. Fragile births and horrible endings. A true pastoral (shepherding is a third of the story) delivered in sparse elegiac prose. So beautifully abbreviated it becomes more by its simplicity and surely harbors deeper meanings. What does it say when the instinctual savagery at our core must be abandoned in order to evolve? Will we be more or will we be less prepared for our future? It might as easily have been titled "The Pit" where we fall with our back to the corner when we make our final stand. Brutal and impossible to describe.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
4,182 reviews3,447 followers
December 3, 2019
Daniel is a recently widowed farmer in rural Wales. On his own for the challenges of lambing, he hates who he’s become. “She would not have liked this anger in me. I was not an angry man.” In the meantime, a badger-baiter worries the police are getting wise to his nocturnal misdemeanors and looks for a new, remote locale to dig for badgers. I kept waiting for these two story lines to meet explosively, but instead they just fizzle out. I should have been prepared for the animal cruelty I’d encounter here, but it still bothered me. Even the descriptions of lambing, and of Daniel’s wife’s death, are brutal. Jones’s writing reminded me of Andrew Michael Hurley’s; while I did appreciate the observation that violence begets more violence in groups of men (“It was the gangness of it”), this was a tough read for me.
Profile Image for Lori.
1,786 reviews55.6k followers
March 30, 2020
Gosh, I do love me some Cynan. He never wastes a word. Simultaneously masculine and tender, the strong, dark imagery absolutely gutted me. It's a violent, unforgiving novel that is not for the weak of stomach. If you can push through the animal brutality, you'll be rewarded with a book about survival and territory and making your last stand.
Profile Image for João Carlos.
670 reviews316 followers
June 10, 2016

Texugo (Fotografia de Ben Birchall)

Cynan Jones (n. 1975) desenvolve a narrativa de ”A Cova” (2014) na paisagem rural do País de Gales, cenários com uma beleza natural deslumbrante, num clima agreste, dominado pela intensidade das chuvas e pelos nevoeiros sombrios.
Duas histórias que se desenrolam em paralelo: a de Daniel, um agricultor, abalado pela tragédia, que explora uma quinta agrícola, onde se dedica, essencialmente, há produção de ovelhas; e a do “homem grande”, sem nome, uma personagem enigmática, um indivíduo grosseiro e ignorante, que se dedica à caça ilegal e furtiva de texugos, uma espécie animal protegida pela lei, e que comercializa ilegalmente, para combates clandestinos.
A escrita de Cynan Jones é extraordinariamente poderosa, numa narrativa intensa, cruelmente descritiva, simultaneamente, visceral e concisa, num tom intimista e constante, onde acaba por não existir nenhuma diferença entre as violentas sequências em que intervêm as personagens principais e as que se associam especificamente aos animais, essencialmente, ovelhas, cães e texugos. Há um factor que é diferenciador na prosa de Cynan Jones, a repetição, que é acentuada pelo clima impiedoso e pelas contrariedades na produção agro-pecuária, nomeadamente, na criação de ovinos e que imprimem ao romance ”A Cova” um tom de desconforto e tristeza.
Associo ”A Cova” a dois excelentes romances – que li nos últimos dois ou três anos: o Daniel fez-me lembrar o Bjartur, o pobre agricultor islandês, igualmente, criador de ovelhas do excepcional romance de Halldór Laxness, Gente Independente ; e o “homem grande”, sem nome, um caçador clandestino, que relaciono ao Juiz Holden, personagem onipresente e onipotente de Meridiano de Sangue ou O Crepúsculo Vermelho no Oeste de Cormac McCarthy.
”A Cova” é um romance curto, demasiado curto, com 142 páginas e com um Epílogo – apenas duas páginas – demasiado abrupto; uma falha menor – a única – que lhe retira as 5*.
”A Cova” é livro não recomendável para os leitores que não suportam a luta ou a crueldade com animais, que detestam o trabalho ou o dia-a-dia de uma quinta agrícola, onde se criam ovelhas, e que se enojam com a descrição e as cores dos fluídos e dos mucos provenientes do nascimento de ovelhas.


Cynan Jones (n. 1975)
Profile Image for Robert Williams.
182 reviews
November 1, 2016
Wow, very bleak but strangely poetic. Horrible scenes of badger baiting juxtaposed with the grief and loneliness of a welsh sheep farmer. A compelling story by a Welsh writer and I will look out for his others.
Profile Image for Steffi.
1,121 reviews270 followers
March 18, 2018
Eine ländliche Gegend in Wales. Zwei Männer, die in ihrer Einsamkeit und Rauheit Teil der kargen Landschaft zu sein scheinen, dabei aber nicht unterschiedlicher sein könnten.

Da ist der Schafzüchter und Witwer Daniel, den wir bei der harten, ermüdenden Arbeit auf der Farm erleben, ein Mann der notwendigerweise ohne übertriebene Sentimentalität für seine Schafe sorgt. Dabei ist er auf wunderbare Weise dem Leben zugewandt, was sich nicht nur an seinem Bemühen um die schwächsten Lämmer zeigt.

Auf der anderen Seite ist da ein namenlos bleibender Hundezüchter mit krimineller Energie, meist nur als „großer Mann“ bezeichnet. Er steht für Destruktion und Verachtung des Lebens. Er organisiert illegale Dachskämpfe und ich hätte nie gedacht, dass ich solches Mitleid mit einem Dachs haben könnte. Aber auch die anderen Männer, die an diesen Kämpfen beteiligt sind, bleiben mir fremd. Wie sie ihre eigenen Hunde, die sie aufgezogen und abgerichtet haben, in solchen Kämpfen zerfleischen lassen, kann beim Leser nur Ekel hervorrufen.

Irgendwie bewegen sich diese beiden Männer aufeinander zu und – Klappentext sei Dank – wissen wir schon, dass es zu einer Auseinandersetzung kommen wird. Die Art der Charaktere und die Knappheit des Erzählstils (der Roman besteht ausschließlich aus sehr kurzen Absätzen, oft nur einen Satz lang) haben bei mir bewirkt, dass ich mich oft nicht in Wales, sondern in einem amerikanischen Western oder auf einer amerikanischen Farm wähnte.

Doch für mich ist das garnicht in erster Linie die Geschichte einer Auseinandersetzung. Das ist einer der traurigsten, berührendsten Liebesromane, die ich je gelesen habe. Daniel ist nach dem Tod seiner Frau in einem so tiefen Kummer gefangen, dass er daran zu zerbrechen droht. Immer wieder während der harten Farmarbeit überwältigen ihn Emotionen und Erinnerungen. Diese Liebe wird unglaublich zärtlich skizziert, aber nie aufdringlich oder kitschig. Gerade weil die Sprache so karg und knapp, hat mich diese Geschichte eines ungeheuren Verlustes ungemein getroffen.
455 reviews1 follower
June 22, 2014
I should say up front that this is not a book I would have ever chosen to read - I had to do so for my book group - and as in the book group, so it is here, in that I am very much in the minority in my reaction to it.

I did think it was a very effective and moving portrait of loss and isolation, and that is a genuine achievement. However, the violence and animal cruelty described in the scenes with the Big Man were so unpleasant and, to my mind at least, so completely unnecessary that they totally coloured my feelings towards the rest of the book. My heart sank and my stomach churned every time the story returned to him. There were other graphic scenes in the book, for example, where he describes the farmer's efforts to help a ewe struggling in labour, which I had no problem with, in fact found very effective, but the depictions of animal cruelty were just too much for me.

Some of the descriptions of the landscape were great, others I found clunky and ineffective, and despite having grown up on farms in the same area, for me there was nothing that particularly anchored his descriptions to that part of Wales (which may or may not have been deliberate on the part of the author, or a mis-reading on my part).
Profile Image for Deea.
365 reviews102 followers
February 16, 2021
4.5*

I have to admit that I had not heard about this author until hearing him speak in a literary podcast. The way he was phrasing his words intrigued me and I decided to give his book(s) a go. And I am so glad I did!

His writing is the most intense and visual writing I have ever stumbled upon. There are two interrelated stories in this book and I really did not care for one of them (reading detailed descriptions of how badgers are killed in the Welsh countryside cannot really be my thing), but the other story from the book is about grief and oh God, can Cynan Jones express the subtilities of grief! In a few poetic, very intense sentences he gets you transported there, in the realm of someone else’s grief and I have to say that his words work like a spell! The way he uses and combines them in order to get this very intense result is simply astonishing. I’ll be sure to try his other books (novellas) as well.
Profile Image for Marc.
988 reviews136 followers
July 2, 2017
Poetically brutal. This is such a masculine landscape where the lines between animal and people blur, where pain and grief simply get ground into the pulp that is daily survival. One man attempts to nurture animal life while dealing with human death. The other seems to foster animal death, which seems like such a savage way of life. Rich. Visceral. At times, throat-closing. Jones weaves a fascinatingly touching story while simultaneously repelling the reader with scenes of such stark violence. Disturbingly lyrical.
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WORDS I LEARNED WHILE READING THIS BOOK:
aubergine | sett | ogham
Profile Image for G.
Author 35 books197 followers
December 27, 2021
La crueldad sustancial del mundo. Su omnipotencia constitutiva. Cualquier voluntad que se contraponga es de la misma naturaleza. Es el gran descubrimiento de la dialéctica. Todos los personajes son variaciones en rojo de la misma intuición, tanto los tejones como sus torturadores. Es como si Kafka hubiera logrado superar su indefensión estructural para colapsar en victimario, pero sin temblar. Quizás haya algo universal en ese gradiente depresivo de crueldad que tiene a Kafkas de un lado y a Jones del otro. Magnífica sobriedad narrativa. Muy buena la edición de Chai.
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,247 reviews35 followers
August 24, 2018
Cynan Jones can do no wrong. Seriously, no-one can write like him - and nobody can write about Wales and the countryside (and the people who live there) like he can.

The Dig focuses on two different men - a farmer and a badger-baiter. The farmer realises the badger-baiter is on his land, and things go from there. The novel is pretty short so that to reveal much else would get into spoiler territory.

Don't misunderstand when I say that Jones writes about the countryside - this isn't cosy nature writing like most non-fiction or novels out there. This is the grim, dark side -- the underbelly, where people are lonely, isolated, and lead tough lives, animals die in unpleasant ways and gruesome things happen. Let's just say I now know way more about badger-baiting than I ever wanted or needed to know. (If you don't like violence against animals in your novels I'd suggest giving this one a miss; it gets incredibly graphic at times.)

Although Jones' writing is sparse it is so alive and unique. I'm just sad that I only have one book of his left unread.
Profile Image for Mark Bailey.
248 reviews41 followers
December 28, 2021
'There was the clatter of the chainsaw and the metallic yelps of the dogs. That made a main terrible noise. It was a brief, flurried clatter of killing'.

A phenonemal novel centered around the intertwining fates of a widowed farmer and callous Badger baiter.

Brutal and intense, set in bleak, unembellished rural farmland in isolated Wales, Jones writes with extreme beauty, in which every sentence is prudently constructed with deft precision. 

An absolutely stunning novel and one of my favourite reads of this year.
Profile Image for Kathleen.
Author 1 book264 followers
July 2, 2017
“He believed by this point that the badger deserved it.”

This is a gut-punch of a read, but massively inspiring to the writer in me. Cynan Jones’ prose is stunning—filled with passages of uncomfortable but simple and meticulous truth. The story is rich and thought-provoking, and explores our relationships with our past, our surroundings, our loved-ones, and the animals we share this life with. Disturbing, but so worth it.
Profile Image for Victoria (Eve's Alexandria).
839 reviews448 followers
January 12, 2014
A brutal, visceral and excruciating read, but deeply beautiful and moving. Daniel is a Welsh sheep farmer who has lost his wife; another nameless man is digging for badgers in his woods, baiting them with dogs for the entertainment of other cruel men. Their worlds converge, symbolically and actually, with violence and grief. Highly recommended, and easy to read in a single sitting.
Profile Image for Kris McCracken.
1,886 reviews62 followers
January 20, 2016
A brilliant, if immensely troubling, short novel that explores the interior lives of two very different men. One, a grieving farmer struggling for the survival of his farm in lambing season, and the other an unnamed badger baiter, who exists seemingly to torture animals for the entertainment of others.

The two lonely men live close to each other in remote Wales, and it is clear from the bleak and foreboding beginning of the book that their lives are set on a collision course that cannot possibly end well.

Equal parts tender and brutal, this really is a fine work. The odd stylistic feature of very little punctuation and no quotation marks at all give it a dreamlike quality, and really does work in transmitting the nature of the two taciturn men, both of whom are struggling with tumultuous inner lives.

Exploring the struggle of farming, the casual brutality of nature and men, and the broken shreds of community, this is not a book for the fainthearted. The stark and very raw depictions of intense grief and of the violence used against the animals are equally breathtaking and appalling. This really is a gut punch of a read (in the best possible way).

I could not recommend it more highly.
Profile Image for Becky.
1,368 reviews57 followers
January 15, 2014
With the badger culls still in the news this feels topical, however it isn't that which makes this such a dramatic and moving book. This is rural Wales with all the romance sucked out of it, leaving only the dirt, blood and harsh reality. The story maybe short but that doesn't prevent it having an impact as the reader is drawn into the lives of Daniel, the grieving sheep farmer, and Ag the badger baiter. I defy anyone with an ounce of empathy to read this book without being moved by the depiction of raw grief given here, or by the visceral dark images of the fate of the creatures Ag digs out of their setts. It is inevitable that the two men's lives will collide. The ending is left uncertain but we can assume that we know what has happened. It is often difficult to convince people that short novella style books are worth buying, but this one manages to create a whole convincing world with a few well placed lines and is worth every penny.
Profile Image for Robert.
2,302 reviews258 followers
July 2, 2017

A book about a recently widowed sheep farmer and a man who has a shady (to say the least) way of living. Eventually their destinies cross with startling results.

Yes this is a cliched summary but really if I do go into more detail I'll spoil everything. While reading this brief novel, a lot of comparisons came into my head. There's the cruel aspect one finds in Evie Wyld's All the Bird's Singing, some of J.M Coetzee's Disgrace and even the Roald Dahl and some of Magnus Mills. Really though The Dig is a unique novel which focuses on loss, however in obvious and more ambiguous ways.

Trigger warning: There is a fair amount of animal cruelty in this novel. If you bypass that you're getting a starkly written book with little symbols to help understand the pain one of the characters is going through.

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