Book review: Gathering – Women of Colour on Nature, edited by Durre Shahwar and Nasia Sarwar-Skuse
Kathryn Tann As a reader (and writer) dwelling often within that genre of ‘nature writing’ – with all its canonical…
No comments.Art preview: Where Are We Now
Where Are We Now A new art show, opening next week at Cardiff’s Oriel Canfas, gathers together the experiences of…
No comments.On Being a Writer in Wales: Richard Gwyn
Richard Gwyn The American writer Lydia Davis once wrote that “to translate is also to read, and to translate is…
No comments.Book review: Wales from the Air by Paul R. Davis
Jon Gower There was a time when many a house and farmhouse in Wales sported an aerial photograph of the…
One comment.On Being a Writer in Wales: Georgia Carys Williams
Georgia Carys Williams I’ve lived in South Wales since I was born. I went to school in Swansea, before attending…
No comments.Yr Hen Iaith, part thirty six: Elis Gruffydd and the Boundaries of Welsh Writing
We continue the history of Welsh literature to accompany the second series of podcasts in which Jerry Hunter guides fellow…
No comments.How history comes to life
Matthew G. Rees What has become of Wales? Where has it gone? These questions – familiar ones in my more…
No comments.Book Review: Tir – The Story of the Welsh Landscape by Carwyn Graves
Jon Gower This absorbing and constantly illuminating book is about many things, as its author asserts: it is about farming…
No comments.Letter from The Great Welsh Marathon
Medi Ashton Today is the day I run my first marathon. In fact, if you are reading this on the…
No comments.Y Filltir Sgwâr/The Square Mile: The Story in the Stones
In a year long series Tom Maloney, from Abersychan, shows how you can love a place so well it becomes…
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