Rhys Davies

A Writer's Life

Biography & Memoir, Literary
Cover of the book Rhys Davies by Meic Stephens, Parthian Books
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Author: Meic Stephens ISBN: 9781909844131
Publisher: Parthian Books Publication: February 1, 2014
Imprint: Parthian Books Language: English
Author: Meic Stephens
ISBN: 9781909844131
Publisher: Parthian Books
Publication: February 1, 2014
Imprint: Parthian Books
Language: English

Drawing on heretofore unavailable sources, including many conversations with the writer’s brother, this biography of Rhys Davies sheds light on the very private life of one of the most dedicated, prolific, and accomplished Welsh prose writers. A homosexual man in the days before the Sexual Offences Act, Davies was an exceedingly discrete indidivual who kept others at arm’s length. Still, Meic Stephens delves into his life with alacrity. He describes the writer’s early years as the Blaenclydach grocer’s son, his abhorrence of “chapel culture,” his bohemian years in Fitzrovia, his visit to D. H. Lawrence in the south of France, his unremitting work ethic, his patrons, his admiration for the French and Russian writers who were his models, and his love-hate relationship with the Rhondda Valley in Wales. Most importantly, however, Stephens discusses the dissembling that went into Print of a Hare’s Foot, a nominal autobiography by Davies’ which the author shows to be an unreliable account. This biography provides a perspective from which Rhys Davies’ very real achievement can more easily be appreciated.

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Drawing on heretofore unavailable sources, including many conversations with the writer’s brother, this biography of Rhys Davies sheds light on the very private life of one of the most dedicated, prolific, and accomplished Welsh prose writers. A homosexual man in the days before the Sexual Offences Act, Davies was an exceedingly discrete indidivual who kept others at arm’s length. Still, Meic Stephens delves into his life with alacrity. He describes the writer’s early years as the Blaenclydach grocer’s son, his abhorrence of “chapel culture,” his bohemian years in Fitzrovia, his visit to D. H. Lawrence in the south of France, his unremitting work ethic, his patrons, his admiration for the French and Russian writers who were his models, and his love-hate relationship with the Rhondda Valley in Wales. Most importantly, however, Stephens discusses the dissembling that went into Print of a Hare’s Foot, a nominal autobiography by Davies’ which the author shows to be an unreliable account. This biography provides a perspective from which Rhys Davies’ very real achievement can more easily be appreciated.

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