CREE: THE RHYS DAVIES SHORT STORY AWARD ANTHOLOGY evokes Wales past and present
Although modern stories, the context set in Cree represents a Wales we all grew up in.
Whether it's paperback, hardback or audio, we’ve got it covered when it comes to all the best new writers, authors and book releases.
Although modern stories, the context set in Cree represents a Wales we all grew up in.
Taking inspiration from folktales, OUR MISSING HEARTS captures the poignancy of the story which is both heartbreaking and hopeful.
New Poetry for September reviewed by Mab Jones including Nick Fisk, Nadia Lines, Jessica Mookherjee, Sarah James and more
From council employee to Wales’ fifth National Poet, Hanan Issa’s finds comfort in poetry & continues leading the Welsh literary landscape.
Thea Lenarduzzi’s first full-length work, Dandelions, has been published after its proposal won the Fitzcarraldo Editions Essay Prize in 2020,
There won’t be many novels published this year that’ll twist your melon more than Our Struggle – the second such effort by Wayne Holloway.
Getting Lost is the diary kept by Annie Ernaux during an 18-month affair she had with a married man, a Russian diplomat who she met in 1988.
In Love Untold, Ruth Jones invites us into the complicated relationships between mum and daughter through raw & believable characterisation.
Mogwai fans will love this autobiography, but the warmth of Stuart Braithwaite’s writing means people unfamiliar will enjoy too.
Welsh actress turned author Ruth Jones releases her third book Love Untold, a warm, joyous and heartbreaking generation-spanning novel.
Whatever Happened To Queer Happiness?, Kevin Brazil (Influx) Price: £9.99. Info: here words NOEL GARDNER
Pictorial and literary elements intertwine to create a touching and personal journal of place in Slyvia Plath's Drawings.
The Story Of Art Without Men is a glorious and pioneering corrective into female and gender non-conformist artists often overlooked and excluded from the past 500 years.
In Faith, Hope and Carnage, Nick Cave and O’Hagan look back over a lifetime of trying to make sense of the incomprehensible through song.
Simon Garfield's All The Knowledge In The World is a must-read. Well, a must-read if you like reading a book about books that tell you things you can find in other books.
Many a great book has been written about comics, but few penned as ambitiously as Damien MacDonald's chronicling of European and American comics.
The Modern Bestiary is a compendium of bitesize introductions to the bizarre and unlikely creatures who walk, swim or soar above the earth.
A powerful multi-dimensional novel spanning different continents and timezones, Cole Haddon’s Psalms For The End Of The World is an intelligent and imaginative read.
In The Boy Who Sat By The Window, David Hodge shares his story from childhood to his drag persona through the AIDS crisis to the present day.
The Bullet That Missed, Richard Osman's third book, is a murder mystery that chugs along nicely with enough twists to keep you guessing.
Much like Anthony Horowitz’s less self-referential work, The Twist Of A Knife is incredibly well balanced and his male characters are complex.
How Hard Is It To Kill?, the second novel from Mac Alexander, centres jointly on a hitman and two members of the police force.
The Intersectional Environmentalist is written by eco-communicator Leah Thomas, the founder of the climate justice group of the same name.
Serving as a prequel to his debut novel, David Keenan’s fifth work Industry of Light & Magic is a hippy-trippy journey toward Afghanistan.