The Mabinogion: eleven tales handed down through the generations in Wales at the very heart of Welsh literature.
They were translated into English by Lady Charlotte Guest in the mid 19th century. A Victorian copy is still in the shelves in my library, and it is utterly beautiful. A recent, highly praised translation by Sioned Davies sits on my shelves. It looked wonderful, and yet it just sat there. Until another book arrived and inspired me.
This book: the Ninth Wave by Russell Celyn Jones. The first is a series commissioned by Seren Books, reinventing the eleven stories of The Mabinogion to be heard more clearly in this age.
It pulls you into an extraordinary world. Religious wars have been raging and oil supplies have been exhausted. The medieval has returned, but the landscape is still modern. Imagine riding your horse along a road littered with discarded appliances to drink coffee at Starbucks!
The wildness of nature and the desolation of the post-industrial society are perfectly juxtaposed, and utterly alive.
Into this world rides Phywll, Welsh lord and landowner, home from war and heading full tilt into the future. The energy was palpable and I flew through the pages, as Phywll fell foul of neighbouring lord, Arawen; became entangled with Arawen’s wife Alma; and then breaks away when he meets Alma’s wilder sister, Rhiannon.
There was a problem: Rhiannon had a powerful fiance. But she had a solution too, a wonderful plan for Phywll to execute. The story moved into a new phase, the energy was still there, but there was dark humour too and a lovely twist. I was still completely engaged, but I turned the pages more slowly, reacted more emotionally.
Phywll and Rhiannon married and had a son. Happy ever after? Not quite. When their son was four he disappeared.
And this is when The Ninth Wave really sings. When it tells of he distress of both parents, the tension between husband and wife, and, eventually, the difficulties that arise when the child returns, on the verge of manhood with no memory of his mother and father. The emotional and psychological insight is acute. And as the story draws to a close with father and son struggling to understand each other it is quite impossible to not be moved.
The whole story arc very cleverly echoes the first branch of the Mabinogion.
The insight into the characters, their emotions, their motivations brings it to life in a way that a traditional telling never could, and the vivid, and utterly plausible, setting allows you to believe utterly.
Wow!