Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum:2022-04-22
- Mått:130 x 198 x 5 mm
- Vikt:96 g
- Format:Häftad
- Språk:Engelska
- Antal sidor:96
- Förlag:Graffeg Limited
- ISBN:9781802580846
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Mer om författaren
Fflur Dafydd is an award winning novelist and screenwriter who writes in Welsh and English. Her second novel Atyniad won the Prose Medal at the 2006 National Eisteddfod and her third novel Y Llyfrgell won the Daniel Owen Memorial Prize in 2009. Her novel Twenty Thousand Saints won the Emerging Writer award at the Hay Festival in 2009, and she became an International Fellow of the Hay Festival in 2013. She has also participated in Iowa University's world renowned International Writing Program, and is a graduate of UEA's creative writing course. To date she has contributed over 40 hours of primetime drama to S4C and the BBC iPlayer, as well as writing on other shows, such as the Chinese remake of the sci-fi sensation 'Humans'.
Recensioner i media
The Replacement Centre is a dystopian tale set in an alternate present, where a miraculous new solution has been found for the newly-bereaved. Why suffer a loss when you can bring home somebody who looks, sounds and acts just like your deceased partner? (Or is close enough, at least.) Numbed by grief, Mrs Denton replaces her husband Lloyd, urged on by well-meaning neighbours. As she gets to know the new man in her home, she learns some uncomfortable truths about herself and her society.This is an excellent read and an absolute bargain for a pound! That’s a penny per page, practically. If you’re anything like me, you’ll whip through it in no time, but the concepts at the core will haunt you. I was wrong-footed at first, presuming this to be a sinister slice of science fiction like The Stepford Wives or The Midwich Cuckoos. It’s not, as it happens, but the comparison feels apt in terms of the self-deception at play, the warped ideal, and the horrors that hide behind neatly-trimmed hedges. The author is Fflur Dafydd, an award-winning novelist, screenwriter and musician who grew up in Llandysul. Her writing style is unusually passive, but it evokes the tone of bereavement beautifully. Mrs Denton narrates her own tale to us as though from a distance – observing and registering facts in a simple fashion, building up a prosaic picture of loss and reconnection – yet it becomes edged with notes of panic as the lies behind Lloyd, their neighbours, and the Replacement Centre are revealed.If I have any criticism it is that, once the nature of the Replacements is made plain, there is too little time spent exploring and understanding their perspective. I can’t say much more here for fear of spoilers, but I was left with the impression that either a lot more happens behind the walls of the Replacement Centre than we are shown – surgically perhaps, training certainly – or that the society Dafydd creates is so privileged and numb that any Replacement will fill their empty lives. Whilst I could happily spend hours delving into Dafydd’s world, her brevity is part of the appeal of the book in these distracted days. The Replacement Centre is published by Graffeg and forms part of the Quick Reads project, coordinated by the Books Council of Wales and supported by the Welsh Government. Each year two English and two Welsh titles are published with the aim of encouraging less-confident readers to fall in love with fiction of all genres. (You can find a full list of these titles at gwales.com) Whilst The Replacement Centre is written in English, Fflur Dafydd has also authored books in Welsh. Whichever your preference, I encourage you to seek out her work. She’s certainly on my list now.