Blogs

Croeso/Welcome to the NEW AmeriCymru


By Ceri Shaw, 2015-12-24
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Nadolig Llawen From AmeriCymru

Croeso / welcome to the all new AmeriCymru site on our new platform - Jamroom. The site is not finished yet but we wanted to draw your attention to some new features and content :)

Check out our new Welsh Music Top 50 Youtube videos page. What will be number 1 for Christmas? You can vote your favourite video 'up' without logging in to AmeriCymru (full details on the page):-

Welsh Music Top 50 Youtube Videos

Check out our interview with Robert Llewellyn Tyler, author of Wales And The American Dream:-

Wales And The American Dream - An Interview with Author Robert Llewellyn Tyler

N.B. You CAN comment on the above interview and indeed on most items on AmeriCymru without being logged in. The new site uses the DisQus commenting system which allows logins from FB, Google and Twitter.

The site is not fully 'live' yet. We hope to be on, or around January 1st. We will email all members their new temporary passwords on that date and switch the DNS so that americymru.net points to this site.

Meanwhile we will be developing new features and content throughout the coming year and we hope you will all check back regularly as we explore the potential of our new platform. There are many exciting new announcements to come :)

Nadolig Llawen a Blwyddyn Newydd Dda i Bawb


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Newport and the Sylvia Beach Hotel


By gaabi, 2015-12-24


Out And About In Oregon (3)




Sylvia Beach Hotel Gallery

This last week, Ceri took me down to the Oregon Coast, to the most fantastic hotel I’ve ever stayed in.  As a disclaimer, I’ll say that I’ve stayed in a lot of hotels, a lot of bad hotels and a lot of expensive hotels, and my idea of fantastic is not any kind of chain, regardless of cost, so it doesn’t include Motel 6 and it doesn’t include the 4 Seasons.

Like, apparently, every other state in the United States, Oregon has a town called Newport.  Our Newport is a small town, both a rest or fun destination and a working commercial fishing port. A classic, old-Oregon coast, beach-town tourist strip lines the street across from the harbor -- in just a few blocks you can get taffy or fudge, anything anyone could think of made of shells, hand blown glass, a trip through a Ripley’s Believe It Or Not museum, a visit to the “Undersea Gardens” or pounds of fish or shellfish, including Dungeness crab.  The Oregon Coast Aquarium is a few miles down the road and across the bay, a world-class conservation and education facility, in addition to being a well-curated collection of marine species. As a kid, Newport was one of my favorite family trips; as a teen, I was lucky enough to get to travel there for a job as a deckhand on a boat going down to California to join the tuna fleet. I was wildly excited, crouching in the bow to hang over the rail and look down into the green water as we left the harbor and headed out to sea.

 Newport, Oregon fishing boats

I’d seen the building that was to become the Sylvia Beach Hotel all my life and often wondered what it was, above the sand on a short cliff. As a kid, I daydreamed my family would buy it and we’d all live there, conveniently next to my favorite place in the world, and live on fish and crabs.  I found the hotel online and shared the link with Ceri, who decided this would be a great place to read and review a book each and booked a room for two nights.

Sylvia Beach hotel

Sylvia Beach was a person, not a beach. Born in Maryland in 1887, she travelled to Spain and then to Paris, where she was to run a bookstore, Shakespeare and Company, until the 1950s. With her partner, Adrienne Monnier, she hosted, encouraged and even published some of the greatest authors in the western world. Shakespeare and Company became a Paris destination for writers; young and newly arrived authors were allowed to work and stay at the store until they got themselves established. Beach befriended Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas, Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce and many other writers arriving in Paris.  Beach was Joyce’s first publisher of Ulysses and arranged for it to be smuggled into the US and Canada, where it was banned. She also published Hemingway’s first book, Three Stories and Ten Poems . She had no personal connection to the city of Newport, to the hotel or to Oregon, the owners just found her inspiring. When you’ve seen the hotel, you know why they were inspired to name it after her.

Garden entry to the Sylvia Beach hotel

The Sylvia Beach Hotel is a literary hotel.  There are no televisions, no computers except one laptop at the desk, no wifi, no phones in the rooms, nothing to distract you from relaxation and reading.  Each room in the hotel is named after an author and furnished in a style either inspired by their work or by their own style, including plenty of books by the author for occupants to enjoy.

According to the history in the lobby, the hotel was originally built in 1913 as The New Cliff House.  Chicken farmer Peter Gilmore bought it in 1920 and ran it with his wife, Cecile, and their family as the Gilmore Hotel until 1957.  The Gilmores kept chickens in the backyard and served chicken and eggs three times a day, with chicken pot pie and eggnog on Sundays. From 1957 into the 1980s, the building was variously a hotel, a Greyhound bus station and then a $10.00-a-week boarding house until 1984, when it was sold to the present owners, Goody Cable and Sally Ford.

The new owners found the building in worn and neglected condition.  They and their friends and family members would put the next three years into gutting and rehabilitating it with the help of an historic architect, using period fixtures and materials, adding private baths to the rooms and designing one-of-a-kind spaces.  When the Sylvia Beach formally opened in 1987, a hundred people were expected to attend.  Several hundred showed up.  The front desk clerk told the story of an elderly man who stood crying quietly in front of the Alice Walker room, he was a nephew of the Gilmores who had stayed there as a boy and this had been his room.

The first floor of the hotel includes a small outdoor garden area leading to its lobby and gift shop, and a hall of guest rooms.  The second and third floors contain halls of guest rooms and a portion of the third floor and the garret attic contain the hotel library, full of comfortable couches and chairs for reading and views of the ocean.  We didn’t go up for this but I was told that the staff serve mulled wine in the library at 10PM.

The most spectacular rooms on the first floor include Agatha Christie, John Steinbeck and Jules Verne.



Two walls in Agatha Christie have large windows facing the beach and the ocean.  This comfortable, opulent room includes a fireplace and very comfortable reading nook. 

Bed and window in Agatha Christie room

 

sitting area in Agatha Christie room

 

fireplace in Agatha Christie room

John Steinbeck features two twin beds, separated by a mural and sculpture of the front end of the Joads’ dust bowl era truck, ala The Grapes of Wrath , its headlights the reading lamps for each bed.  Hotel cat, Shelly, demonstrates their comfort, below.  The room also contains a collection of jars of things found on a beach and other allusions to Steinbeck works and, of course, a collection of his novels to enjoy, and ocean views out the windows.

 

John Steinbeck room

Jules Verne faces the garden at the entry way but it’s so imaginative that I didn’t care if there was an ocean view, because there was a giant cephalopod tentacle coming out of the wall. The room is furnished a though it were Captain Nemo's suite from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and the door in the hallway to this room looks like a pressurized entry to the Nautilus. Just opening that promised fun things inside.

Bed and desk in Jules Verne room

 

desk and giant octopus tentacle in Jules Verne room

Upstairs, a fantastic wooden medieval/gothic style chair and four poster bed sit in Shakespeare. Above the bed sits a paper Globe Theater with paper players and the bathroom contains a cheeky question, “to pee or not to pee?”

Bed and chair in Shakespeare room

J. K. Rowling is all fun, sumptuous red Harry Potter, including a framed set of wands on the wall, a Nimbus 2000 hanging from the ceiling, a stuffed three-headed puppy curled up on the four-poster bed with its velvety curtains, owls at the windows, “stone” walls and a mural of the hapless Moaning Mabe, frowning sadly behind the toilet.

Bed in J. K. Rowling room

Dr. Suess is on the second floor, in bright colors, murals, stuffed toys and other Suess memorabilia. The full bed includes Ned’s furry feet sticking out of the footboard and the toilet tank is a fish tank for a red fish and a blue fish.

bed in Dr. Suess room

 

More rooms than we’ve mentioned here include Mark Twain, Colette, Herman Melville, Alice Walker, Jane Austen, J. R. R. Tolkien, Ken Kesey, Virginia Wolf, Amy Tan, Emily Dickinson, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway.

The restaurant in the hotel, Table of Contents, served an included really excellent breakfast and also offers dinner service (not included) by reservation, with three entree choices - meat, seafood and vegetarian, and beer and wine. The dining room has fantastic ocean views with two walls of windows and a patio area for better weather. Residents of the surrounding area came for special occasion dinners,  which was a good sign of dependable quality from their two chefs.  The two nights we were there, the meat entrees were an absolutely excellent flank steak and Earl Grey crusted pork tenderloin, with a choice of local oyster dishes for seafood.

By foot, there are other restaurants, shops and several bookstores in the blocks nearby, an area known as Nye Beach. The Newport Visual Arts Center is across the street.  The Newport Symphony Orchestra is at the performing arts center, only two blocks away. We found a promising looking Irish pub and a great wine shop with a very helpful owner just a block away from the hotel.

The beach itself is right around the corner of the hotel and down a short hill.  High tide comes all the way up the sand and it’s not particularly safe at night, the ocean throws up trees and stumps onto the sand, but during the day you can walk forever down the beach, from lighthouse to lighthouse, and possibly not see another person, except in the summer.

If you want to visit or find out more about the Sylvia Beach Hotel, find them here:

http://www.sylviabeachhotel.com/

The Sylvia Beach Hotel

267 N.W. Cliff, Newport, Oregon 97365

Reservations and Cancellations 888-795-8422 

 

I hope we get to go back soon and I’ll close with this shot of Shelly, the hotel cat, who boldly visited us in our room for a long nap, on Ceri, and to receive appreciative kitty massage.

Shelly the cat sleeping on bed

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New Welsh Review is delighted to announce it will be running its New Welsh Writing Awards 2016 on the theme of travel writing in association with the University of South Wales and CADCentre UK and will be open for entries on 19 January 2016 . The judges are New Welsh Review editor Gwen Davies and award winning travel writer Rory MacLean, author of ten books including best sellers Stalin's Nose, Under the Dragon and Berlin: Imagine a City.

The Awards celebrate the best writing of short form non-fiction (5,000-30,000 words) from emerging and established writers based in Wales or who have been educated there. The New Welsh Writing Awards 2015: WWF Cymru Prize for Writing on Nature and the Environment was won by Eluned Gramich for Woman Who Brings the Rain: A memoir of Hokkaido, Japan (published 15 October 2015, £2.99 Kindle ebook). Eluned said about her win: “This Prize has given me the confidence to treat my writing seriously. I’m now writing a novel again, and this time I am determined not to give up.”

First prize is £1,000 cash, e-publication by New Welsh Review on their New Welsh Rarebyte imprint in 2016, a positive critique by leading literary agent Cathryn Summerhayes at WME, as well as lunch with her in London. Second prize is a weeklong residential course in 2016 of the winner’s choice at Tŷ Newydd Writing Centre in Gwynedd, north Wales. Third prize is a weekend stay at Gladstone’s Library in Flintshire, north Wales. All three winners will also receive a one-year subscription to the magazine. In addition New Welsh Review will consider the highly commended and shortlisted nominees for publication in a forthcoming edition of its creative magazine New Welsh Reader with an associated standard fee. 

The shortlist will be announced at an event at Hay Festival on 1 June 2016 and the winner at a ceremony at the Royal Welsh College of Music and Drama in Cardiff on 7 July 2016 . Full details, including terms and conditions, will be found online from 19 January 2016 at www.newwelshwritingawards.com .  

Gwen Davies, editor of New Welsh Review says: “Since economy and precision is what journals champion, it's right that these awards celebrate the shorter publishing formats that our digital age has made possible. When fellow judge, prize winning travel author Rory MacLean and myself make our adjudication next summer, I'm sure we will unveil a host of talent to add to the stable of writers on travel that have already found a home in the pages of the magazine. I hope that Rory's ambition, invention and stunning prose style will inspire newcomers to the genre and veteran travel hands alike.”

Co-judge Rory MacLean says “Only by experiencing the world from another person's point of view can we begin to understand that person or society.  Borders are bridged most powerfully by individuals, through characters and stories, by evoking empathy. Hence the enduring importance of travel and travel writing, and of this competition that goes to the very heart of the matter.”

Dr Nic Dunlop, Head of English at the University of South Wales, said: "We are delighted to be working with New Welsh Review to find the best writing talent in Wales and beyond. This Prize has already discovered Eluned Gramich’s beautifully crafted essay writing and we are very much looking forward to revealing more talented writers of the future."

Ali Anwar, Managing Director of CADCentre UK, added: "The CADCentre is delighted to support the New Welsh Writing Awards for a second time, celebrating the work of writers from Wales and those who are educated here nurtures and raises the profile of our writing talent. Building links between the business and the arts communities should be a creative experience and a source of inspiration for both, especially in a country which has a deep and innate respect for culture.”

The New Welsh Writing Awards 2016: University of South Wales Prize for Travel Writing is sponsored by the University of South Wales and CADCentre UK. New Welsh Review has also partnered with WME, Gladstone’s Library and Tŷ Newydd Writing Centre for this project. New Welsh Review Ltd is supported through core funding by the Welsh Books Council and hosted by Aberystwyth University Department of English and Creative Writing.

For interview requests and review copies of Woman Who Brings the Rain by Eluned Gramich, please contact Megan Farr on marketing@newwelshreview.com or 07912149249.

 

Tom Jones - The Wexford Carols


By AmeriCymru, 2015-12-19




READ MORE HERE



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A message from Candace Avery of the International Songwriting Competition (ISC):- " I just wanted to pass on this important music press release to you and Americymru., and hope that you can pass on the information to musicians in your reach. We'd love to have winners that ended up finding out about Unsigned Only 2015 via Americymru. "

2015 UNSIGNED ONLY MUSIC COMPETITION JUDGING PANEL ANNOUNCED





Sinead O'Connor, Alt-J, The Killers, Aimee Mann, Dustin Lynch, Rosanne Cash, and More Sign On As Judges

December 17, 2014 - Unsigned Only Music Competition revealed today its high-profile judging panel for the 2015 competition, which is now accepting entries. The renowned panel consists of iconic recording artists and journalists and will determine the winners in eleven categories representing a wide variety of commercial genres of music.

Designed for solo artists, bands, and singers who are not signed to a major label, Unsigned Only's goal is to find an outstanding, talented performing artist: a band, singer, or solo artist. Unsigned Only gives away over $100,000 in cash and prizes, including $10,000 in cash and one-on-one mentoring by an elite group of record company executives to the overall Grand Prize winner. First and Second Place winners in each category will also be chosen. The deadline to enter is March 18, 2015. Original and cover songs are accepted in all categories except for Screen Shot which accepts original songs only.

Artists may enter into any of the following categories: Adult Album Alternative (AAA) Adult Contemporary (AC); Americana; Christian; Country; Folk/Singer-Songwriter; R&B/Hip-Hop; Rock; Pop/Top 40; Screen Shot; Teen; and Vocal Performance.

Screen Shot is a new category that has been added this year, and it is geared toward helping artists get their music in film, TV, video games, and advertising. Music execs who are looking to place music in various projects will be judging this category and will also provide advice on music licensing to the winner of the category. Included are: Michelle Bayer (Shelly Bay Music); Michelle Silverman (Modern Planet); Ani Johnson (Monomyth Media); Evan Stein (Experience Music Group); Velma Barkwell (East End Music Productions); Jen Taunton (Level Two Music); and more to be announced.

"Last year Screen Shot was a special promotion that we ran for entrants," says Founders/Directors Candace Avery and Jim Morgan. "The response was huge and was a great success for many artists who were able to secure licensing deals for their music. This is just another way for Unsigned Only to help its entrants, and we are excited to be able to open these new doors for independent artists."

Judges include:  Aimee Mann; Alt-J; Dustin Lynch; Sinead O'Connor; The Killers; Rosanne Cash; David Crowder; Robert Smith (The Cure); Darryl McDaniels (Run DMC); Ray Wylie Hubbard; Aaron Shust; Lucero; Kelly Price; Colt Ford; Frank Foster; Jason Gray; Rapsody; Kool And The Gang; Anthony DeCurtis (Contributing Editor, Rolling Stone); Kyle Anderson (Senior Writer, Entertainment weekly); Josh Jackson (Co-Founder and Editor-In-Chief, Paste Magazine); Chris Richards (Pop Music Critic, The Washington Post); Michael Hann (Music Editor, The Guardian); Shirley Halperin (Music Editor, Billboard and Hollywood Reporter); Lucy Jones (Deputy Editor, NME); Hardeep Phull (Music Critic, New York Post); and more to be announced.

Unsigned Only is sponsored by: Sony Creative Software, Guitar Center, D'Addario, Disc Makers, Ultimate Ears, Lurssen Mastering, Master Tour by Eventric, and The Music Business Registry.

For entry and general information, please go to http://www.unsignedonly.com

27th June


By Huw Llywelyn Rees, 2015-12-17

On this day 1906, an earthquake measuring 5.2 on the Richter scale hit Swansea, wreaking damage and bringing panic to the streets.

The picture shows Bwa Maen (The Stone Bow), the extreme folding of rock along the Dinas Fault. A fault line running from Hereford to Swansea - the cause of the Swansea earthquake of 1906. This remains one of the UK's largest ever tremors and was felt over much of south Wales. Contemporary reports tell of falling bricks and chimney pots, children being evacuated from school, Mumbles lighthouse wobbling on its foundations and Llanelli's Town Hall clock stopping.

There were very few injuries, however, with only one man and a three-year-old boy requiring hospital treatment after being hit by bricks and a girl working in Cwmavon being badly injured when tin plates toppled on top of her.



 

Born this day 1906 in Maesteg. 

Vernon Watkins  poet, translator and painter, he read fluently by the age of four, and at five announced that he would be a poet.

He wrote poetry and read widely from eight or nine years of age and was especially fond of the works of Keats and Shelly. Watkins spent most of his working life as a bank clerk and was only interested only in having enough time to work on poetry.  He was a close friend of Dylan Thomas who described him as "the most profound and greatly accomplished Welshman writing poems in English" and he was the only person from whom Thomas took advice on writing poetry.  He along with Dylan Thomas were members of the Swansea group known as the "Kardomah boys".  He was godfather to Dylan's son Llewelyn and wrote Dylan Thomas's obituary.




Wales toured South Africa in 1998 under caretaker coach Denis John , with an inexperienced side and got the hiding of all hidings at Loftus Versfeld on 27th June, with the Boks running riot and winning the game 96-13. It was Wales's biggest ever defeat, the 15 tries Wales conceded was another record as was the 83-point losing margin. 

WALES: 15. Byron Hayward (Darril Williams) 14. Dafydd James 13. Mark Taylor 12. John Funnell (Stephen Jones ) 11. Garen Evans 10. Arwel Thomas 9. Paul John (David Llewellyn) 1. Mike Griffiths 2. Barry Williams (Garin Jenkins) 3. John Davies (Darren Morris) 4. Ian Gough 5. Andy Moore 6. Nathan Thomas 7. Colin Charvis (Geraint Lewis) 8. Kingsley Jones, captain (Chris Wyatt).




Born this day 1985 in Port Talbot

James Hook  - Wales international rugby union player who currently plays for the French club Perpignan.

Hook's strengths as a player include good distribution skills, his tactical and spacial awareness and reliable goal kicking. His instinct is to play an attacking running style of rugby and his versatility in being able to play in many positions is an asset to any team he plays for, however this versatility has also meant that he has not been able to nail down a secure playing position and many believe that this was a major consideration in his decision to move to France., Hook is Wales third highest all-time points scorer behind Neil Jenkins and Stephen Jones.

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Y Mabinogi (and the English version Otherworld) ,  is mainly an animated film, but also containing live action sequences, which is based on  The Mabinogion.  It was released on 27th June 2003, starring Matthew Rhys, Daniel Evans and Jenny Livsey.

 

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Lake Billy Chinook And Lake Simtustus


By Ceri Shaw, 2015-12-16


Out And About In Oregon (2)




We took a few days to explore the backwoods of Oregon this winter and headed for Lakes Billy Chinook and Simtustus near Madras. We packed a Canon Rebel and a GL2 and spent many happy hours filming and photographing the glorious surroundings. I hope to get some film footage up shortly but meanwhile you can find some of our pictures on this page and more here Lake Billy Chinook Gallery

A Canon Rebel is not the best of cameras and the light was not good but we hope our shots have done the area some justice. Anyone wanting to visit will find a google map at the bottom of the page and here are some details about the lake and its history from the Wikipedia:-


Lake Billy Chinook is a reservoir in Jefferson County in the U.S. state of Oregon. Created by the Round Butte Dam in 1964, Lake Billy Chinook lies in a canyon at the confluence of the Crooked, Deschutes, and Metolius rivers near Culver and Madras. It was named for Billy Chinook, a Native American of the Wasco tribe who traveled alongside American explorers John C. Frémont and Kit Carson in their expeditions of 1843 and 1844."


You'll need a whole day if you're planning to explore the area properly, especially if you plan to take in Lake Simtustus too, but it's well worth the effort. On a cautionary note, it would be ill-advised to visit during icy conditions because of the many steep, narrow and winding roads in the area.

the_road_to_billychinook.jpeg

One of the fascinating and easily missed sights in the area is the Crooked River Petraglyph. It can be found at the roadside as you pass the 'Island', a peninsula situated between the Crooked River and Deschutes branches of the reservoir. The 'Island', closed to public access since 1997 is home to one of the last nearly pristine ecosystems of its type in the United States. The petraglyph is a stunning relic of a bygone era and more can be learned from the series of interpretive panels which accompany it (quoted below and pictured here )

Crooked River Petroglyph


In 1961, three years before Lake Billy Chinook was created, University of Oregon archaeologist Luther S. Cressman surveyed the three river canyons in this area. Of notable interest was this massive, engraved basalt boulder along the west bank of the Crooked River. Because of its perceived historical value, the Crooked River Petroglyph was extracted in the winter of 1963 and placed at this site, approximately one mile from its original location, as a reminder of the area's cultural history.

Similar ancient images and designs found worldwide are collectively known as "rock panels" by scientists. In this region, the appearance of these often-stylistic images varies among cultural groups, but the true meaning of the images is known only to those who originally made them.


Lake Simtustus (pictured below) is an infrequently visited jewel. It is entirely flanked along one shore by the Warm Springs Indian Reservation and apart from a small boating resort there is no human activity for many miles around.

Lake Simtustus

And here's where it's at if you're planning to visit :)

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Why not experience the Welsh life by attending the Cardiff Intensive Welsh Summer Course which has been running for over 40 years !

You can attend the course for two, four, six or eight weeks and you’re able to apply for a bursary to help with your fee.

If you are a complete beginner and are coming over to Wales in the summer, why not come to our Welcome to Wales course to learn more about this beautiful country.

If you would like to be part of the 2016 Summer Course, find out all of the details  here.

www.learnwelsh.co.uk

  +44 (0)29 2087 4710

info@learnwelsh.co.uk



Beth am brofi’r bywyd Cymreig trwy fynychu Cwrs Dwys Haf Caerdydd sydd yn rhedeg ers dros 40 mlynedd!

Mae modd i chi fynychu’r cwrs am ddwy, pedair, chwech neu wyth wythnos a dych chi’n gallu ceisio am fwrsariaeth i’ch helpu chi gyda’ch ffi.

Os dych chi’n ddechreuwr pur a dych chi’n dod draw i Gymru dros yr haf, beth am ymuno â’n cwrs Croeso i Gymru i ddysgu mwy am y wlad hyfryd hon.

Os hoffech chi fod yn rhan o Gwrs Haf 2016, gwelwch yr ho ll fanylion yma .

www.learnwelsh.co.uk

  +44 (0)29 2087 4710

info@learnwelsh.co.uk


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The beautiful Nanteos Mansion , now a sumptuous five star hotel, is said to be one of the most haunted houses in the whole of Wales. New novel  The Shadow of Nanteos portrays the life of the Elizabeth Powell, the famous Ladi Wen or Grey Lady of Nanteos.

It is said that she has been seen stalking the long, first floor corridor; in the hallway and bending over the bed of a terrified maid. But, it is on the stairs that the most vivid sightings have taken place. Not only has she been seen there but, according to Ghost Hunters International who filmed at the Georgian house in 2008, she has even been recorded begging for help.

Jane Blank’s book explores the life of this mysterious figure, who lived at Nanteos in the 1750s and who is said to roam the property searching for her lost jewels. Waterstones Wales Book of the Month and long listed for the Historical Novel Society Awards, 2015, Robert Peston called it ‘A wonderful Gothic evocation of Wild Wales’. In the words of critic Emma Corfield Waters on Radio Wales ‘It is a fascinating book; perfect for this time of year’.

Exclusive signed copies are available in selected branches of Waterstones and the novel can be ordered from many sites online to arrive in time for Christmas.  

Jane Blank will be at Abergavenny Library Christmas party at 6.30 pm, Friday the 11th of December. There she will be reading from the novel, answering questions and signing copies. Wine and mince pies will be available and profits will go to Abergaveny library.


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Llywelyn Ap Gruffudd, The Death Of A Warrior Prince A Welsh historical novella based on true events has been published to coincide with the anniversary of the death of Welsh Prince Llywelyn ap Gruffudd - or Llywelyn the Last, who died on the 11th of December, 1282.

In Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, The Life and Death of a Warrior Prince , Llywelyn narrates his own life story and the attempt to free Wales from English hegemony.

His life and death has always confronted us with a puzzling contradiction - he was the only Welsh leader to be officially recognised by the English as Prince of Wales, yet, within a year of his death, Wales lay crushed beneath the iron heel of the rapacious English.

The author Peter Gordon Williams was born in Merthyr Tydfil. A mathmatics graduate, he served for two years in the RAF before pursuing a career as a teacher in further and higher education.  The author has already published four novels, including very well-received novel on the life of Owain Glyndŵr in 2011.

Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, The Life and Death of a Warrior Prince by Peter Gordon Williams (£6.95, Y Lolfa) is available now.


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