library of wales logo
The Withered Root by Rhys Davies
ISBN 978190576247X, price £ 7.99  
cover photo of The Withered Root by Rhys Davies from the Library of Wales series

"Rhys Davies's characters all walk straight out of the page and hold one with an almost physical attraction."
The Times

Synopsis:
The Withered Root recounts the troubled life of Reuben Daniels, reared in a South Wales industrial valley, in the bosom of the Nonconformist culture. Therein lies his downfall and that of his people, for The Withered Root is as thoroughly opposed to Welsh Nonconformity as My People (Caradoc Evans), though for different reasons. Revivalist passions constitute nothing but a perverse outlet for an all too human sexuality which chapel culture has otherwise repressed. Nonconformity has withered the root of natural sexual well-being in the Welsh, and then feeds off the twisted fruits.

About the author:
Rhys Davies (1901–1978) was one of the most prolific and unusual writers to emerge from the Welsh industrial valleys in the twentieth century. Born in Clydach Vale, a tributary valley of the Rhondda arising from Tonypandy, he was the fourth child of a small grocer and an uncertified schoolteacher. He spurned conventional education and left the valley, which was to be the basis of much of his work, at the age of nineteen, settling in London, which was to remain his base until he died.

Early in his literary career, he travelled to the south of France where he was befriended by D. H. Lawrence, who remained an influence in his writing. Though sex remained, for Davies, the primary determinant of human relations, he differed radically from Lawrence in that he saw the struggle for power rather than love, either sexual or emotional, as the crucial factor.

Though the bulk of his work was in the novel he achieved his greatest distinction in the field of the short story. Having few predecessors, Welsh or English, he drew his inspiration and models from continental European and Russian masters; Chekhov and Maupassant, Tolstoy and Flaubert. His view of humanity was Classical in that he saw people as being identically motivated whether in biblical Israel, Ancient Greece or the Rhondda valley. Much of his output was concerned with women, who would almost invariably emerge triumphant from any conflict.

He was a gay man at a time when it was difficult to live openly with his sexuality. He lived alone for most of his life and avoided relationships which seemed to betoken commitment on his part. His closest friendships were with women. He avoided literary coteries and groups, though he might have joined several, and held no discernible religious or political convictions. He lived, to an intense degree, for his art.

Short extract:
Hugh Daniels at last got married, and immediately after the ceremony in Pisgah Chapel, Martha and he settled down to life in the little cottage that was part of Martha’s legacy from her deceased father – a dwelling in one of those naked rows, chiefly occupied by colliers, that rise, shrouded in grey coal-dust, on the Valley hills.
Read the entire extract of The Withered Root HERE...

Order your copy of The Withered Root from Gwales.com - the Welsh Books Councils dedicated book sales web site

Other titles in the Library of Wales collection:

A Man's Estate by Emyr Humphreys; click on the cover image for more information on this title A Rope of Vines by Brenda Chamberlain; click on the cover image for more information on this title Ash on a Young Man's Sleeve by Dannie Abse; click on the cover image for more information on this title
Black Parade by Jack Jones; click on the cover image for more information on this title Border Country by Raymond Williams; click on the cover image for more information on this title Congratulate the Devil by Howell Davies; click on the cover image for more information on this title
Country Dance by Margiad Evans; click on the cover image for more information on this title Cwmardy & We Live by Lewis Jones; click on the cover image for more information on this title Dai Country by Alun Richards; click on the cover image for more information on this title
Home To An Empty House by Alun Richards; click on the cover image for more information on this title I Sent a Letter to My Love by Bernice Rubens; click on the cover image for more information on this title In The Green Tree by Alun Lewis; click on the cover image for more information on this title
Jampot Smith by Jeremy Brooks; click on the cover image for more information on this title Make Room for the Jester by Stead Jones; click on the cover image for more information on this title Poetry 1900-2000 by Meic Stephens (editor); click on the cover image for more information on this title
Rhapsody by Dorothy Edwards; click on the cover image for more information on this title So Long Hector Bebb by Ron Berry; click on the cover image for more information on this title Sport by Gareth Williams (editor); click on the cover image for more information on this title
The Alone to the Alone by Gwyn Thomas; click on the cover image for more information on this title The Battle to the Weak by Hilda Vaughan; click on the cover image for more information on this title The Caves of Alienation by Stuart Evans; click on the cover image for more information on this title
The Dark Philosophers by Gwyn Thomas; click on the cover image for more information on this title The Great God Pan by Arthur Machen; click on the cover image for more information on this title The Heyday in the Blood by Geraint Goodwin; click on the cover image for more information on this title
The Hill of Dreams by Arthur Machen; click on the cover image for more information on this title The Valley, The City, The Village by Glyn Jones; click on the cover image for more information on this title Turf or Stone by Margiad Evans; click on the cover image for more information on this title
Voices of the Children by George Ewart Evans; click on the cover image for more information on this title