Rhys Hughes  

From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Related e

Wikipedia
Wiktionary
Shop


Featured:

Rhys Henry Hughes (born September 24, 1966), is a Welsh writer and essayist.

Born in Cardiff, Hughes is a prolific short story writer with an eclectic mix of influences, which include Italo Calvino, Milorad Pavić, Jorge Luis Borges, Stanisław Lem, Flann O'Brien, Vladimir Nabokov, Felipe Alfau, Donald Barthelme and Jack Vance. Much of his work is of a humorously eccentric bent, often parodies and pastiches with surreal and absurdist overtones, although he is by no means limited to any of these forms and has proven to be extremely versatile. He has been published in Postscripts among many other places.

Although he is not a member of OuLiPo, the international literary group that uses mathematics and logic to create texts that break the familiar patterns of "normal" writing, he is one of the few English-speaking practitioners of these methods. For instance his novella 'Elusive Plato' was apparently written in the 'shape of a tesseract'. Some of his more experimental works can be considered examples of ergodic literature.

His long novel Engelbrecht Again! is a sequel to Maurice Richardson's 1950 cult classic The Exploits of Engelbrecht and is the most radical of Hughes's books, making extensive use of lipograms, typographical tricks, coded passages and other OuLiPo techniques.

His main project consists of authoring a 1,000-story cycle of both tightly and loosely interconnected tales. Hughes calls this cycle a "wheel", which in turn is formed by smaller "wheels within wheels". At the end of December 2006, Hughes wrote his 400th story. The linear sequence was disrupted when author Michael Bishop offered to write Hughes's 612th tale, a number picked at random. That story now serves as Bishop's introduction to Hughes's short novel The Crystal Cosmos.

As well as publishing books in English and having those works translated, Hughes has created books especially for foreign language publishers that will never exist in English. For instance, A Sereia de Curitiba will only exist in a Portuguese version, and the Greek version of A New Universal History of Infamy is radically different from the English original.

In 2005 his was the title story in The Minotaur in Pamplona, two chapbooks published by D-Press and edited by Neil Ayres. The collection also featured a poem by Brian Aldiss.

Hughes is also a regular performer of his own poetry and in October 2006 won Swansea's first Open Slam Poetry Competition.

In addition to fiction and poetry, Hughes has published many articles on a variety of topics, including literary criticism. He is currently working on a critical biography of author Michael Moorcock.

Has been published in the award-winning Postscripts.

Contents

Bibliography

Novels

  • The Percolated Stars (2003)
  • Engelbrecht Again! (Dead Letter Press; October 2008)
  • Mister Gum (forthcoming 2009)
  • Twisthorn Bellow (forthcoming 2009)

Novellas

Collections

Original Foreign Language Books

  • Em Busca do Livro de Areia (selection in Portuguese translation, 2005)
  • A Sereia de Curitiba (short fiction in Portuguese translation, 2007)

Chapbooks

  • Romance with Capsicum (1995)
  • In Praise of Ridicule (2003)
  • The Skeleton of Contention: Short Stories of Absurdist Fiction (Whispers of Wickedness; October 2004)

Books in Preparation

  • Tallest Stories
  • My Cholesterol Socks
  • The Clown of the New Eternities
  • Wuthering Depths
  • Djinn Septic
  • Unevensong
  • Fists of Fleece
  • Your Saturated Stockings
  • Salty Kiss Island
  • The Jam of Hypnos
  • Bone Idle in the Charnel-House
  • The Senile Pagodas
  • Ditto and Likewise
  • The Pilgrim's Regress
  • The Isle of Chrome
  • The Sky Saw
  • The Solar Weavers
  • The Indigo Casbah
  • Dribble as I Dawdle
  • Implausible Planets
  • Taurus of Nemedia
  • The Scamps of Disorder
  • Soft Wine
  • Our Malignant Slippers
  • Occam's Beard
  • Suppers at the Periodic Table
  • The Just Not So Stories
  • The Phantom Festival
  • The Knight of Whatever




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Rhys Hughes" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

Personal tools