My Beautiful Obsession: researching and writing the historical novel, ‘My Beautiful Imperial’

At around 4am, on April 11th 2011, unable to sleep, tossing and turning in bed, I got up, put the kettle on and grabbed an old school exercise book and a pen. On the top of the first page, I wrote the date, then the title, ‘Imperial’, then started writing down what had been slowly fermenting in my head for weeks, months, possibly years: the story of Captain David ‘Jefferson’ Davies.

Even though he was born in 1848 and died in 1914, the person I had imagined into being was, by that point, as real to me as any of my immediate family. His looks, his nature, his way of walking, his mannerisms had all taken shape in the course of almost twenty years’ research. To the extent that Captain David ‘Jefferson’ Davies was known to us children at all, he was always referred to as ‘Captain Jeff’. An image of him had hung on the wall of my grandfather’s workshop, although we hadn’t paid too much notice. We knew he was an uncle from a long time in the past. We knew he’d been born near Cardigan and that he’d been a sailor, like so many in our family had been. We knew he’d sailed a ship called the Imperial and that he’d somehow been involved in a civil war in Chile. We knew he’d retired back to Cardigan sometime before the outbreak of the First World War.

There were exotic stories too, handed down. My grandmother remembered seeing him sprawled in a ditch as she was on her way to Sunday school. According to her, he would routinely fail to make it home at night because he drank too much in Cardigan’s Black Lion. No, no, he suffered from bouts of malaria, responded a more sympathetic aunt. Can you catch malaria in Ferwig, we queried? He drank so much that he cried for a woman he’d left behind in Chile, said some. When he drank even more, he sang entire rounds of Spanish songs and cried again in sorrow, they said. Or hiraeth. Who knew? Yet, he’d captained what looked to me like a seriously impressive ship. All those sharp-tongued sailors and brawny engineers – managing a crew like that would have taken some guts. And skill, surely? And hadn’t he won some medal for his part in the war? He couldn’t have been just a plain old drunk. He must have been more than a layabout? My quietly spoken chapel-going grandfather idolised him. Why? Who was the star of these wildly contradictory stories? Was he all of these characters? Or none? He fascinated me.

My mother was a talented genealogist. Her memory for dates of births, deaths and marriages was second to none. Armed with her scaffolding of basic facts and place names, I set out to fill in the gaps and discover more about who he was and what he’d really got up to in Chile. Why had he adopted the name ‘Jefferson’ and why had a merchant sailor got involved in a war that had nothing to do with him on the other side of the world? I had no intention whatsoever of writing a book. I just wanted to know more about someone who had the same genes as me.

I wish I could convey the excitement of historical research. Does the thought of sitting in an ancient library surrounded by leather-bound records fill you with dread? I was lucky enough to start my research before Lloyd’s Register of Shipping was digitized. On my first visit to the Caird Library at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, I was thrilled to be able to turn the pages of those huge volumes with my very own hands, and marvel at my uncle’s name recorded in the loops and twirls of an elegant Victorian script.

Everything came alive with the smell of those century and a half old pages. I saw the person who wrote the record, the room they were in, what they were wearing, the time of day. Queen Victoria was on the throne when that ink was drying. I felt like an archaeologist who scrapes back dirt to find the first signs of a golden torque. They’re not gasping because they’ve found gold. They’re holding their faces in awe because what they can see in the mud is a doorway opening, right in front of them, transporting them backwards in time, to the touch of the person who laid the precious object in the earth and whose breath warmed it for the very last time.

I was hooked. Each time I found new evidence of my uncle’s ships or records of a voyage I hadn’t known about, I felt like a character in my very own adventure. I was a scout on a forgotten trail, picking up evidence here and there, piecing a life back together, making sense of the clues he’d left behind, making him breathe, seeing the world through his eyes. 

Eventually, I had reams and reams of information. What was I going to do with it all? I couldn’t talk about him forever. My friends and family had started glazing over. I could see them thinking, ‘Oh, no, not again’. But I couldn’t let him languish in my lever arch files. I’d resurrected him. I couldn’t bury him again without letting him have his moment in the sun. Someone needed to write a book. Gradually, I realised no one else was going to do it. That ‘someone’ had to be me.

Were you always taught to finish what you started? Finish your food. Finish your homework. If I start something I have to see it through. It’s a good trait, mostly. When I put pen to paper that day, I knew I’d started something that I wouldn’t be able to abandon half done. I had to be in it for the long haul. There’s no way out of obsession except through. ‘Through’ over 100,000 words to be exact.

I was working and had family responsibilities so it took me three years of writing, often at four in the morning when no one else was around. Did he drink? Undoubtedly. Did he lie in a ditch? Quite probably. Did he cry for a woman he’d left behind in Chile? Almost certainly. He was also a charismatic leader, a passionate man who stayed faithful to his men in the direst circumstances. He led them safely through a series of events that could so easily have proved fatal for them all.

The very word ‘imperial’ has so many negative connotations today. Without realising that the name refers to an actual ship, some have interpreted the title as a celebration of Imperialism itself and all the bad things that went with it. The truth is far more interesting and complex than that.

Aside from any possible literary merit, am I pleased I did it? Of course. I brought a dead man back to life. At the very least, I’m immensely glad about that.

 

Rhiannon Lewis’s debut novel, My Beautiful Imperial, was published by Victorina Press in December 2017. In March 2018, it was listed by the Walter Scott Prize Academy as one of its recommended books, alongside the work of established authors including, amongst others, John Banville, Neal Ascherson and Marcel Theroux.

Mystery Solved!

For many years I have pondered over what is written on the back of this carte de visite. It is one of the photographs included in Captain David ‘Jefferson’ Davies’s own album. Even though I had asked several Spanish speakers to translate it, and they had interpreted some of it, parts of it still remained a bit of a mystery. Until now! Artist David Hopkins (responsible for the beautiful painting of Javi which is on the cover of my new book, I Am the Mask Maker) is also a fluent Spanish speaker and rather good at palaeography, the deciphering of old manuscripts. He has worked out that this is what it says in Spanish (English translation below it):

Dedico est(a) foto

Recuerdo ami (a mi)

Querido amigo

Daveis en prueba

de amitad (amistad) i (y)

carino (cariño) (/) su

(a)miga María

I dedicate this photo (as a, ‘como un' is missing)

Souvenir/ reminder to my

Dear friend

Daveis [Davies] in proof

of friendship and

affection (,) his friend Maria

According to David Hopkins, the dedication does not appear to have been written by a woman of education, as evidenced by the shaky spelling and punctuation. Perhaps she wasn’t a native speaker of Spanish?

I would dearly love to know who she was. Perhaps someone in Chile will recognise her from their own family archives one day?

I Am the Mask Maker and other stories: how the pandemic forced author Rhiannon Lewis to 'go on location' and travel through time

The cover painting, Javi, is by the artist David Hopkins

The cover painting, Javi, is by the artist David Hopkins

In September 2020, Rhiannon Lewis became the first UK winner of the William Faulkner Literary Competition’s short story category since it was established in 1997. Covid-19 meant that Lewis couldn’t attend the ceremony in New Albany, Mississippi and the awards were held online, in common with so many other events last year. Now, just over a year later, Victorina Press is publishing her new anthology, I Am the Mask Maker and other stories which includes the Faulkner contest winning story, Piano Solo.

Lewis’s debut novel, My Beautiful Imperial, published by Victorina Press, was placed on the Walter Scott Prize Academy recommended list of historical novels in 2018.

Lewis is no stranger to competitions and many of the stories in the new anthology have either been shortlisted or won competitions, including The Significance of Swans shortlisted for the Bristol Prize in 2019 and The Jugs Stay with the Dresser which won Frome Festival’s short story competition in 2017.

Lewis admits to having a love/hate relationship with competitions.

‘When you are a writer published by a small, independent press, getting mentioned in competitions is often the only comfortable way for you to draw attention to your work, particularly if you feel embarrassed blowing your own trumpet on social media.’

Lewis goes on to explain that after another of her stories was shortlisted for the HG Wells competition last year, she set to work on the theme proposed for this year: Mask.

‘Given our recent experiences, the challenge was to write something that wouldn’t be too depressing. I decided to ‘go on location’ and travel through time. I went back to Renaissance Italy and wrote about a place which was as far away from Pandemic Britain as I could imagine – beautiful, watery Venice.

‘Even though the final story ended up being nearly twice as long as the maximum word count allowed for the competition, which meant I couldn’t submit it, it did produce one of my most uplifting stories. It also gave me the title for my book. Competitions are useful, not always in the way they’re intended.

‘However, whenever a story fails to make it on to a shortlist, I console myself that writing is not a sport. Jan Morris was wise, as always, when she said, “There are no rules to art, though, nobody is offside, and to my mind nobody should be judged a winner. Not even me.”’

 

I Am the Mask Maker and other stories will be released on 30 October, 2021 but can be pre-ordered now directly from the publisher www.victorinapress.com or from all good bookshops.

 

           

I Am the Mask Maker and other stories

My new short story collection has gone to the printers! I’ll be posting more news about it in due course but I thought I’d take the opportunity to share the cover painting with you here for the very first time.

The painting is called Javi and the artist is David Hopkins. I’ve loved David’s work for such a long time and when I saw this painting I knew it would be perfect for the cover. I’m thrilled and honoured that David agreed to let me use the image for the collection. It’s such a striking portrait and perfectly conveys the determination of so many of the characters I’ve written about in my book.

If you’d like to see more of David’s paintings, you can find his work here:

www.davidhopkinspaintings.co.uk and also on Instagram: davidanthonyhopkins

Portrait PNG.png

Vision: H.G. Wells Short Story Competition

I love this cover!

I love this cover!

A whole year has gone by since one of my stories, The Last Flight of la Librairie d’Afrique du Nord was shortlisted by the H.G Wells Short Story Competition. I was thrilled to have my story published in the competition’s anthology, Vision. Things were so busy at the time that I completely forgot to post the good news! You can buy the anthology from Trencavel Press. The story is also included in my new short story collection which will be appearing very soon.

The William Faulkner Literary Contest

Screen+Shot+2020-09-26+at+08.10.53.jpg

PRESS RELEASE 25 September 2020

Welsh Writer Rhiannon Lewis Wins William Faulkner Literary Prize for Short Story

Welsh author, Rhiannon Lewis, has become the first UK writer to win the prestigious William Faulkner Literary Competition in the Adult Short Story category. The competition was established in 1997 to commemorate the centenary of Faulkner’s birth. 

The win was announced on 25thSeptember from the William Faulkner Library at the Union County Heritage Museum in New Albany, Mississippi. The prize, which is usually awarded at a luncheon with around 200 guests in attendance, was broadcast live on the Museum’s Facebook page because of the ongoing situation with Covid-19. The presentation was made by Lynn Madden on behalf of the William Faulkner Literary Committee. 

William Faulkner was born on 25 September, 1897 in New Albany, Mississippi. He won the 1949 Nobel Prize for Literature and Pulitzer Prizes for Fiction in 1955 and 1963, and is widely regarded as one of the most celebrated writers in American Literature.

The adult short story award calls for a single, previously unpublished story of up to 10,000 words written in English. Lewis’s story, Piano Solo, tells the story of an eccentric Maths teacher whose one true obsession is perfecting Rachmaninov’s notoriously difficult third piano concerto. Previous winners and runners-up have come from as far afield as Australia, New Zealand, Brazil and Iran as well as the United States.

Rhiannon Lewis took up writing in 2011. Her debut novel, My Beautiful Imperial, was published by independent publisher Victorina Press in 2017 and was named by the Walter Scott Prize Academy as one of its recommended historical novels. In 2018, it was translated and published in Spanish as Mi Querido Imperial. Other works by Rhiannon Lewis have had success at competitions such as Frome Festival, Hammond House, Bristol Prize, and The New Welsh Writing Awards.

Victorina Press will be publishing an anthology of Lewis’s short stories in 2021. The company’s managing director, Dr Consuelo Rivera-Fuentes says, ‘Becoming the first UK author to win this prestigious, international award is a remarkable achievement and a testament to Lewis’s ability to create memorable stories.’

For more information on the competition, go to: www.williamfaulknerliterarycompetition.com

For more information on Victorina Press, go to: www.victorinapress.co.uk

To watch the ceremony on the Union County Heritage Museum’s facebook page: 

www.facebook.com/WilliamFaulknerGardenatuchm

 

HG Wells Short Story Competition

Screen+Shot+2020-09-21+at+09.28.14.jpg

I’m thrilled to be included on the shortlist of the HG Wells Short Story Competition with The Last Flight of La Librairie d’Afrique du Nord. It’s a story I started writing last year and completed during lockdown. Shortlisted stories are published in the competition’s anthology, so anyone interested will get a chance to read it there in due course. The awards ceremony will take place on 22 November.

Herbert George Wells (1866 - 1946) was an English writer who wrote novels, short stories, biography, autobiography, and works of social commentary, history and satire. Today, he is best rememberd for his science fiction novels, including The Time Machine, The Invisible Man and The War of the Worlds. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature four times.

HG Wells was a diabetic. In 1934, he co-founded The Diabetic Association which is known today as Diabetes UK.

Not a post about lockdown

At the moment, I can’t think of anything interesting to say about lockdown. I suspect, like everything, a certain amount of perspective is needed to see things clearly. However, it has provided some of us with time to go through the ‘archives’. I came across this newspaper cutting from March 1975, most probably The Tivyside, the local paper for Cardigan. It’s nice to think that I am still in touch with Anne and Gwen after all these years. I have no idea where Janet Vaughan is now. But we obviously loved literature, even then! Dyddiau da! Good times!

Rhiannon, Janet Vaughan, Anne Jenkins, Gwen Davies.jpg

'Mi Querido Imperial' at Foyles, Charing Cross Road

Welcome book lover, you are among friends.The Spanish translation of My Beautiful Imperial is now on sale at the famous Foyles, London. Foyles is a glorious bookshop and the foreign languages floor is almost directly opposite the cafe. So you could …

Welcome book lover, you are among friends.

The Spanish translation of My Beautiful Imperial is now on sale at the famous Foyles, London. Foyles is a glorious bookshop and the foreign languages floor is almost directly opposite the cafe. So you could theoretically buy my book and then visit the fabulous cafe to have a coffee while you start reading it! Sheila, the buyer for the department, has been hugely helpful. At the moment she is half way through reading the novel and her verdict so far: ‘It’s brilliant!’

New Welsh Reader and The New Welsh Writing Awards

In May, I was thrilled to discover that my novella, The Significance of Swans, had been placed second in the New Welsh Writing Awards, 2019: Aberystwyth University Prize for a Dystopian Novella. Prizes were awarded at the Hay Festival. The novella was based on, and was an extension of, a short story which had previously been shortlisted by the Bristol Prize, back in October 2018.

First prize at the New Welsh Writing Awards was awarded to JL George for The Word, and third prize was awarded to Rosey Brown for Adrift. Excerpts of all three can be found in this month’s edition (number 122) of the New Welsh Reader. You can order copies here: https://www.newwelshreview.com/shop.php

The edition also includes excerpts from highly commended entries by Dewi Heald for Me, I’m Like Legend, I Am, Heledd Williams for Water, Water, Nowhere and Thomas Pitts for The Chosen. Llongyfarchiadau, well done, everyone!



JAmjRYgJRGGr93pcmgdL4Q.jpg



Second Edition of 'My Beautiful Imperial' released

I’m delighted the second edition of ‘My Beautiful Imperial’ has now arrived, after the first run of copies sold out. Complete with up to date reviews, but with the same gorgeous cover, designed by Steffan Glynn.

Copies are available from Victorina Press, all good book shops and Amazon.

If you enjoy it, don’t forget to leave a review on Amazon (you don’t have to buy the copy from them to leave a review) or Goodreads. Take a look at my suggestions below on how you can support an author without necessarily buying their book.

https://www.rhiannonlewis.co.uk/how-to-support-a-writer

YEbzWl9ERf%2BJG4tOAGb0VA.jpg
A5Postcard_NewQuotes.png

Crickhowell Literature Festival

I am very much looking forward to being part of this event. At 2pm, Sunday, 6 October, I will be in conversation with Gwen Davies, editor of the New Welsh Review. We will be discussing my book, ‘The Significance of Swans’, which came second in the New Welsh Writing Awards, as well as other Wales-sourced dystopias in general. Tickets and more information available at: https://cricklitfest.co.uk/event/rhiannon-lewis-gwen-davies-dystopias-of-wales/

Screenshot 2019-09-08 14.28.38.png


WH Smith Aberteifi/Cardigan

Diolch i WHSmith Aberteifi am y croeso cynnes, ac i bawb alwodd mewn heddi. Wedi cwrdd â nifer o bobl diddorol, ac wedi gwerthu llyfrau i bobl mor bell i ffwrdd a Kent a Denmark!

Thank you to WHSmith Cardigan for the warm welcome, and to everyone who called in today. I met lots of interesting people and sold some books to people from as far away as Kent and Denmark!

Rhiannon%2Byn%2BWH%2BSmith.jpg

WH Smith Cardigan signing/Arwyddo yn Aberteifi

Rhiannon gyda My Beautiful Imperial.jpg

WH Smith Aberteifi/Cardigan

Gwener 26 Gorffennaf 2019

Bydd Rhiannon Lewis yn arwyddo copïau o My Beautiful Imperial yn WH Smith Aberteifi, rhwng 10 – 4yh. Cafodd y nofel ei hargymell gan y Walter Scott Prize Academy yn 2018. Galwch mewn i ddweud helo a chael sgwrs.

 

Friday 26 July 2019

Rhiannon Lewis will be signing copies of My Beautiful Imperial at WH Smith Cardigan, between 10 – 4pm. The book was listed by the Walter Scott Prize Academy as one of its recommended books for 2018. Call in to say hello.

Crickhowell Literature Festival, 6 October 2019.

Rhiannon Lewis and Gwen Davies

Dystopias of Wales,

2pm , 6 October 2019. The Parish Hall, Crickhowell Literature Festival.

In 2015, Cardiff-Cornish musician Gwenno Saunders won the Welsh Music Prize with an album inspired by Owain Owain’s 1976 Welsh-language dystopian novel, Y Dydd Olaf , from which her record takes its name. In 2018, Lloyd Markham was a Betty Trask award-winner for his Wales-set book of drugs, friendship and alien abduction, Bad Ideas\Chemicals, and his book went on the following year to win the New Welsh Readers’ Poll for the best ever dystopian novella published in English. This summer, Rhiannon Lewis won second place in the New Welsh Writing Awards Aberystwyth University Prize for a Dystopian novella, with her book The Significance of Swans, about mass disappearances, parallel realities and a violent intruder.  

 

Gwen Davies talks to Rhiannon Lewis about her own evocative dystopia, Wales-sourced dystopias in general, explores how an author can combine the known and unknown, the intimate and places on the furthest reaches of our imagination, and asks what are those issues that cause most public anxiety today and how are fiction writers responding to them. 

 

Gwen Davies has been editor of New Welsh Reviewsince 2011 and a co-judge for the New Welsh Writing Awards since their inauguration in 2015. She has worked as creative editor at publishers including Parthian, founded the imprints Alcemi and New Welsh Rarebyte Her latest published translation is The Jeweller by Caryl Lewis. 

 

Rhiannon Lewis’s debut novel, My Beautiful Imperial, was published in December 2017. In March 2018, it was listed by the Walter Scott Prize Academy as one of its ‘recommended’ historical novels. Rhiannon has also had success with short stories, including the Bristol Prize, 2018, Hammond House International Short Story Prize, 2017 and Frome Festival Prize, 2017 which she won. 


Gwen Davies

Gwen Davies

Rhiannon photo.jpg

New Welsh Writing Awards

Thank you to the New Welsh Writing Awards for awarding 2nd prize to 'The Significance of Swans', in the Aberystwyth Prize for dystopian novella. Congratulations to all the shortlisted authors, and in particular the winners, JL George (Aberystwyth Prize) and Peter Goulding (winner of the Rheidol Prize).

Diolch i'r New Welsh Writing Awards am osod 'The Significance of Swans' yn ail yng nghystadleuaeth Gwobr Aberystwyth ar gyfer nofel fer dystopaidd. Llongyfarchiadau i'r awduron eraill ar y rhestr fer, yn arbennig yr ennillwyr, JL George (Aberystwyth Prize) a Peter Goulding (ennillydd y Rheidol Prize).

For more information about the award, click here

Photo courtesy of New Welsh Review

Photo courtesy of New Welsh Review

New%2BWelsh%2BWriting%2BAwards%2Bphoto.jpg

Mi Querido Imperial: Lanzamiento/Launch/Lansiad

We had a great evening at the Embassy of Chile, celebrating the launch of ‘Mi Querido Imperial’. Here are some photos to give a flavour of the evening.


The Ambassador, Mr David Gallagher

The Ambassador, Mr David Gallagher

Banner 1.jpg
With Catalina Herrera Acuña, Cultural Affairs and Press Attaché for the Embassy of Chile, and Steffan Glynn, the cover designer for ‘Mi Querido Imperial’.

With Catalina Herrera Acuña, Cultural Affairs and Press Attaché for the Embassy of Chile, and Steffan Glynn, the cover designer for ‘Mi Querido Imperial’.

Crowd 1.jpg
Signing a copy for the Chilean author J T Blackie, Juanita Ozamiz.

Signing a copy for the Chilean author J T Blackie, Juanita Ozamiz.

With Paloma Zozaya, author, and guest

With Paloma Zozaya, author, and guest

Paloma Zozaya, author, in charge of readings and questions.

Paloma Zozaya, author, in charge of readings and questions.

Mi Querido books 1.jpg
Sophie Lloyd-Owen, introducing Victorina Press in the absence of the founder (due to illness), Consuelo Rivera-Fuentes.

Sophie Lloyd-Owen, introducing Victorina Press in the absence of the founder (due to illness), Consuelo Rivera-Fuentes.

With Adam Feinstein, acclaimed author.

With Adam Feinstein, acclaimed author.

With Sophie and Jorge from Victorina Press.

With Sophie and Jorge from Victorina Press.

With the Ambassador, David Gallagher, and Sophie Lloyd-Owen and Jorge Vasques, from Victorina Press.

With the Ambassador, David Gallagher, and Sophie Lloyd-Owen and Jorge Vasques, from Victorina Press.

Sophie Lloyd-Owen, Victorina Press.

Sophie Lloyd-Owen, Victorina Press.

With Paloma Zozaya, making last minute notes ahead of the launch.

With Paloma Zozaya, making last minute notes ahead of the launch.

Paola.jpg
Taking questions from the audience with Paloma Zozaya

Taking questions from the audience with Paloma Zozaya

Paola Rhiannon 2.jpg
With Steffan Glynn, book cover designer for ‘Mi Querido Imperial’, and ‘My Beautiful Imperial’.

With Steffan Glynn, book cover designer for ‘Mi Querido Imperial’, and ‘My Beautiful Imperial’.

With Mr David Gallagher, Ambassador.

With Mr David Gallagher, Ambassador.

The Ambassador, Mr David Gallagher, welcoming everyone at the start of the event.

The Ambassador, Mr David Gallagher, welcoming everyone at the start of the event.

Crowd 2.jpg
Juanita man Paloma Rhiannon.jpg
Fermin Pavez, author.

Fermin Pavez, author.

Presentation from side 2.jpg
Presentation Rhiannon 2.jpg
Sophie Adam Paloma Rhiannon.jpg
Steffan Glynn, designer.

Steffan Glynn, designer.

Presentation Rhiannon 3.jpg
With Heidi Hurst, graphic designer.

With Heidi Hurst, graphic designer.

Rhiannon looking up 2.jpg
With the Chilean author J T Blackie, Juanita Ozamiz.

With the Chilean author J T Blackie, Juanita Ozamiz.

Pilar Cerón Durán and family.

Pilar Cerón Durán and family.

Guests 6.jpg

Launch Date - Mi Querido Imperial

The launch of Mi Querido Imperial will take place between 6-8pm, on Thursday, 16 May 2019 at the Embassy of Chile, 37-41 Old Queen Street, London SW1H 9JA.

We would love to see you there. If you would like to attend, please get in touch with Sophie or Jorge at Victorina Press: victorinapress@gmail.com

This will be a bilingual event in Spanish/English, with some Welsh thrown in! However, the readings will all be in Spanish.

A5Postcard_Sp (1).png