Niall Griffiths Popular Books

Niall Griffiths Biography & Facts

Niall Griffiths (born 1966) is an English author of novels and short stories, set predominantly in Wales. His works include two novels Grits and Sheepshagger, and his 2003 publication Stump which won the Wales Book of the Year award. History Griffiths was born in Toxteth, Liverpool, but had a long family link to Welsh roots in West Wales. As a nine-year-old boy Griffiths found a second-hand copy of a novel by Rhondda writer Ron Berry in a junk shop. Berry, who wrote from the viewpoint of the industrial working class, but in a more earthy and centred style then many of his more celebrated peers, "spoke" to Griffiths who was captured by the language and style of the writing. In future years Griffiths continued to cite Berry as a major influence, along with writers Alexander Trocchi and Hubert Selby Jr. In 1976 his family emigrated to Australia, but returned three years later after his mother became homesick. Griffiths found himself in trouble with the law during his adolescence, and at the age of 15 he was sent on an Outward Bound course in Snowdonia in North Wales. He found the experience uplifting and refocused him to work harder at gaining an education, eventually gaining a degree in English. Griffith spent several years taking on a number of short term menial jobs before he was accepted into Aberystwyth University to study for a PhD in post-war poetry, but failed to complete the course. He followed this by researching his first novel, following disaffected and marginalised characters, living ordinary lives. This resulted in his debut novel, Grits, a story of addicts and drifters set in rural Wales, which was published in 2000. Griffiths followed up Grits with Sheepshagger, a novel centred on a feral mountain boy named Ianto, which received strong reviews. In 2002 he published Kelly + Victor, which explores the passionate sexual relationship between two clubbers which spirals towards destruction. The book was made into a film in 2012, directed by his friend Kieran Evans. His 2003 novel Stump won two national awards, the Welsh Books Council Book of the Year and the Arts Council of Wales Book of the Year Award. After two more novels Wreckage and Runt, he wrote two travel guides Real Aberystwyth, about his new home, and Real Liverpool, both edited by Peter Finch. In 2009 he wrote Ten Pound Pom, travelling back to Australia for the first time as an adult, comparing his memories spent in the country as a child with his new found experiences. He followed this with a book of prose, In The Dreams of Max and Ronnie, New Stories from the Mabinogion, commissioned by Seren Books in a series that reimagines the stories of the Mabinogion undertaken by modern writers. The Dreams of Max and Ronnie take in the story of The Dream of Rhonabwy, while other books in the series featured the authors Owen Sheers, Gwyneth Lewis and Russell Celyn Jones. 2013 saw Griffiths release his seventh novel A Great Big Shining Star, his aggressive take on celebrity culture and fame. Two years later Griffiths released his first collection of poetry, Red Roar: 20 Years of Words. In 2020 Griffiths won the Wales Book of the Year award for a second time with his novel Broken Ghost Bibliography Novels Grits (2000 ISBN 0-224-05996-3) Sheepshagger (2001 ISBN 0-09-928518-5) Kelly + Victor (2002 ISBN 0-09-942205-0) Stump (2003 ISBN 0-09-928758-7) Wreckage (2005 ISBN 0-09-946113-7) Runt (2007 ISBN 978-0-224-07123-9) In The Dreams of Max and Ronnie, New Stories from the Mabinogion (2010) A Great Big Shining Star (2013) Broken Ghost (2019) Poetry Red Roar:20 Years of Words (2015 ISBN 978-1-90311-020-1) Non-Fiction Ten Pound Pom (2009) Guide books Real Aberystwyth (with Peter Finch) (2008 ISBN 978-1-85411-447-1) Real Liverpool (with Peter Finch) Prizes and awards 2004 – Wales Book of the Year, for Stump 2020 – Wales Book of the Year, for Broken Ghost Critical studies Aleksander Bednarski: Inherent Myth: Wales in Niall Griffiths's Fiction. Lublin: Wydnawnictwo KUL (2012). Mark Schmitt: British White Trash: Figurations of Tainted Whiteness in the Novels of Irvine Welsh, Niall Griffiths and John King. Bielefeld: Transcript (2018 ISBN 978-3-8376-4101-1) References External links Contemporary writers: Niall Griffiths Niall Griffiths at IMDb. Discover the Niall Griffiths popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Niall Griffiths books.

Best Seller Niall Griffiths Books of 2024

  • Out Of The Shadows synopsis, comments

    Out Of The Shadows

    Mary Jane Staples

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  • Entertaining Angels synopsis, comments

    Entertaining Angels

    Joanna Bell

    Joshua Gilfoyle has decided there are two things he wants from life before he dies: to find his lost son and to commission an artist to produce his lasting legacy a new angel for ...

  • A Bright Moon for Fools synopsis, comments

    A Bright Moon for Fools

    Jasper Gibson

    “Very funny, very unpleasant, and very moving.” Michael PalinHarry Christmas is unable to cope with the death of his wife and has been bouncing from one bad decision to the next. A...