Owen's debut novel, Resistance is published in
the UK by Faber & Faber and was made into a feature
film in 2010.
In the months afterwards all of the women, at some point, said they’d known the men were
leaving the valley…
1944. After the fall of Russia and the failed D-Day landings, a German counter-attack lands
on British soil. Within a month, half of Britain is occupied.
Sarah Lewis, a 26-year-old farmer’s wife, wakes to find her husband Tom has disappeared. She
is not alone. All the other women in the isolated Welsh border valley of Olchon also wake to find their husbands
gone. With this sudden and unexplained absence the women regroup as an isolated, all-female community and wait,
hoping for news.
A German patrol arrives in the valley, the purpose of their mission a mystery. When a severe
winter forces the two groups into co-operation, a fragile mutual dependency develops. Sarah begins a faltering
acquaintance with the patrol’s commanding officer, Albrecht Wolfram. But as the pressure of the war beyond presses
in on them, the valley’s delicate state of harmony is increasingly threatened, before being broken completely, with
devastating consequences.
Imbued with immense imaginative breadth and confidence, Owen Sheers’ debut novel unfolds with
the pace and intensity of a thriller. A hymn to the glorious landscape of the border territories and a gripping
portrait of a community under siege, Resistance is a first novel of considerable grace and power.
Resistance is published by Faber & Faber and can be bought below.
The BBC Audio version of Resistance read by Richard Coyle (Who ironically went to drama
school with Tom Sykes, founder of CART) can be downloaded from www.audible.co.uk
See Owen talk about his book, research and the locations that inspired him below.
Praise for Resistance
“[A] remarkable first novel. Resistance is at once a brilliant and sometimes frightening
thriller, and a mature exploration of human blur and compromise. Its plot presupposes that the Germans defeated the
Normandy landings of 1944, and counter-attacked so powerfully that they soon occupied almost the whole of Britain.
Sheers treads his tricky path with infinite subtlety. The book’s themes are universal: love of land and country,
love and hate of nations, love and suspicion among people, fear and war and common decency.”
- Jan Morris, The Guardian
“What if the D-Day landings had failed and a successful German invasion of Britain had
followed? Owen Sheers takes real contingency plans for this alternative outcome to the Second World War as the
premise for his first novel, Resistance, and creates around his imagined history a credible and moving story of
loyalty and quiet courage. An impressive debut and confirms Sheers as a writer whose talent encompasses a variety
of literary forms.”
- The Independent
“Owen Sheers’s powerful first novel dances brilliantly with the possibilities of an
alternative outcome to the Second World War. Resistance is less a thriller than a hymn to poetry. Embedded in the
history and landscape of this border area, poetry seeps into our awareness as a fragile but persistent site of
resistance to the forces of darkness.”
- The Telegraph
“Poet Sheers takes readers to a small Welsh village during a speculative WWII – featuring a
German invasion of Britain – in his auspicious debut novel. It’s 1944 and Sarah Lewis and the women in Ochlon
valley are left alone after all the local men disappear one night. The women’s worlds suddenly shrink to the
day-to-day struggles to keep their sheep farms going until the war comes to their doorsteps in the form of Captain
Albrecht Wolfram and his men, who have a murky mission to carry out in the valley. Promising to leave the women
alone, the Germans occupy an abandoned house and the two camps keep mostly to themselves until a harsh winter takes
hold, and it becomes clear that the locals and the Germans will have to depend on one another to survive. But when
the weather breaks and the valley reopens to the world – and hence the war – the peculiar idyll threatens to
shatter. Sheers’s alternate reality is frighteningly convincing and dripping with heartbreak. This is an
outstanding debut.”
- Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
“If you had to pitch a movie version of Resistance, you might describe it as: "Fatherland
meets Land of Our Fathers. " Like Robert Harris's bestseller, Owen Sheers' exceptional debut sees 20th-century
history fork to the benefit of the Nazis. ..The heart of this book is the relationship between the valley's women
and the soldiers, and particularly that between Sarah and the cerebral German captain, Albrecht. From this clash of
worlds, Sheers conjures a moving meditation on what war does to people. The second world war often invites a
Manichaean view of the world. But Resistance explores with subtlety the grey areas between self-preservation and
altruism. If Albrecht is sympathetic, he is never the stereotypical "good Nazi ", while the breathless ending
avoids easy cop-outs. The result is impossible to resist.”
- Financial Times
Author Praise for Resistance
“Owen Sheers' Resistance is an astonishing and compelling study of human nature against the
backdrop of an occupied village. Sheers plumbs the depths of love, cowardice, bravery, and the devastating effects
of blind patriotism, and in doing so exposes the best and worst of humanity in unexpected and haunting ways.”
- Sara Gruen, author of Water for Elephants
"A beautiful, vital novel, about the paths that can lead to war, and out of it."
- Nadeem Aslam, author of Maps for Lost Lovers
“A remarkable work of speculative imagination. Sheers writes with an austere, bracing beauty
perfectly attuned to the stark lives (and loves) of his characters. The result is that rare gift, a literary
thriller whose pages we turn slowly, even regretfully, savoring every word.”
- Peter Ho Davies, author of The Welsh Girl