Read The Dreams of Max & Ronnie Online
Authors: Niall Griffiths
GWYNETH LEWIS
THE MEAT TREE
A dangerous tale of desire, DNA, incest and flowers plays out within the wreckage of an ancient spaceship in
The Meat Tree
, an absorbing retelling of one of the best-known Welsh myths by prizewinning writer and poet, Gwyneth Lewis.
An elderly investigator and his female apprentice hope to extract the fate of the ship's crew from its antiquated virtual reality game system, but their empirical approach falters as the story tangles with their own imagination.
By imposing a distance of another 200 years and millions of light years between the reader and the medieval myth, Gwyneth Lewis brings the magical tale of Blodeuwedd, a woman made of flowers, closer than ever before: maybe uncomfortably so.
After all, what man has any idea how sap burns in the veins of a woman?
Gwyneth Lewis was the first National Poet of Wales, 2005-6. She has published seven books of poetry in Welsh and English, the most recent of which is
A Hospital Odyssey
.
Parables and Faxes
won the Aldeburgh Poetry Prize and was also shortlisted for the Forward, as was
Zero Gravity
. Her non-fiction books are
Sunbathing in the Rain: A Cheerful Book on Depression
(shortlisted for the Mind Book of the Year) and
Two in a Boat: A Marital Voyage
.
OWEN SHEERS
WHITE RAVENS
“Hauntingly imaginative...” â Dannie Abse
Two stories, two different times, but the thread of an ancient tale runs through the lives of twenty-first-century farmer's daughter Rhian and the mysterious Branwen⦠Wounded in Italy, Matthew O'Connell is seeing out WWII in a secret government department spreading rumours and myths to the enemy. But when he's given the bizarre task of escorting a box containing six raven chicks from a remote hill farm in Wales to the Tower of London, he becomes part of a story over which he seems to have no control.
Based on the Mabinogion story âBranwen, Daughter of Llyr',Â
White
Â
Ravens
 is a haunting novella from an award-winning writer.
Owen Sheers is the author of two poetry collections,Â
The Blue
Â
Book
 andÂ
Skirrid Hill
(both Seren); a Zimbabwean travel narrative,Â
The Dust Diaries
 (Welsh Book of the Year 2005); and a novel,Â
Resistance
, shortlisted for the Writers' Guild Best Book Award.Â
A
Poet's Guide to Britain
 is the accompanying anthology to Owen's BBC 4 series.
RUSSELL CELYN JONES
THE NINTH WAVE
“A brilliantly-imagined vision of the near future...one of his finest achievements.” â Jonathan Coe
Pwyll, a young Welsh ruler in a post-oil world, finds his inherited status hard to take. And he's never quite sure how he's drawn into murdering his future wife's fiancé, losing his only son and switching beds with the king of the underworld. In this bizarrely upside-down, medieval world of the near future, life is cheap and the surf is amazing; but you need a horse to get home again down the M4.
Based on the Mabinogion story âPwyll, Lord of Dyfed',Â
The Ninth
Â
Wave
 is an eerie and compelling mix of past, present and future. Russell Celyn Jones swops the magical for the psychological, the courtly for the post-feminist and goes back to Swansea Bay to complete some unfinished business.
Russell Celyn Jones is the author of six novels. He has won the David Higham Prize, the Society of Authors Award, and the Weishanhu Award (China). He is a regular reviewer for several national newspapers and is Professor of Creative Writing at Birkbeck College, London.
HORATIO CLARE
THE PRINCE'S PEN
The Invaders' drones hear all and see all, and England is now a defeated archipelago, but somewhere in the high ground of the far west, insurrection is brewing.
Ludo and Levello, the bandit kings of Wales, call themselves freedom fighters. Levello has the heart and help of Uzma, from Pakistan â the only other country in the free world. Ludo has a secret, lethal if revealed.
Award-winning author Horatio Clare refracts politics, faith and the contemporary world order through the prism of one of the earliest British myths, the Mabinogion, to ask who are the outsiders, who the infidels and who the enemy within...
Horatio Clare is a writer, radio producer and journalist. Born in London, he grew up on a hill farm in the Black Mountains of South Wales as described in his first bookÂ
Running for the Hills
, nominated for theÂ
Guardian
 First Book Award and shortlisted for theÂ
Sunday Times
 Young Writer of the Year Award. Horatio has written about Ethiopia, Namibia and Morocco, and now divides his time between South Wales, Lancashire and London. His other books includeÂ
Sicily through Writers' Eyes
,Â
Truant: Notes from the
Â
Slippery Slope
 andÂ
A Single Swallow
 for which he was the recipient of a Somerset Maugham Award.
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