Look at what my daughter got me for my birthday! As a lifelong Asterix fan, this week definitely motivate me to keep reading⊠Especially as I already know most of the lines!
Wow this is great! I might have a look for it. Will be fun to see if I can understand any of the puns
Oh, I have read that in English and enjoyed it so i will definitely try it yn Cymraeg.
I atteded a Sadwrn Siarad online last Saturday and we looked at the poem âY Llwynogâ by R. Williams Parry. I later found that this poem is included in the book âHoff Gerddi Cymruâ which has been sitting on my âread it some dayâ shelf for ages. I am not usually a reader of poetry either in Welsh or English, but this has encouraged me to give it a try.
Sue
We met the translator during a BƔtcamp once and it was very interesting hearing how he went about it - going back to the original French, then creating puns and references that would make sense to Welsh readers. Very clever!
List of nofels/collections of short stories suitable for learners
Hi all. Iâm helping the Welsh Books Council with a project. We want to compile a list of Welsh language novels/collections of short stories suitable for learners who have been reading books written specifically for learners e.g. the series Amdani Advanced level, and want to take the next step and try books that are not written for learners.
Iâll include my recommendations, and hopefully recommendations of a couple of Welsh language bookshops and recommendations of the National Center for Learning Welsh and Welsh tutors. I also want to include recommendations of other learners and would be delighted if anyone wants to contribute.
Iâll need the title of the book, the authorâs name and a couple of sentences to explain why you recommend it - for example there is little dialect or the language is not too formal. You can post here or send me an email - mattdspry@yahoo.co.uk
Thanks!
Matt Spry
Rhestr o nofelau/casgliadau o straeon byrion syân addas i ddysgwyr
Shwmae bawb. Dw iân helpu Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru gyda phrosiect. Dyn ni eisiau llunio rhestr o nofelau/casgliadau o straeon byrion Cymraeg syân addas i ddysgwyr sydd wedi bod yn darllen llyfrau wediâu hysgrifennuân benodol i ddysgwyr, e.e. y gyfes Amdani lefel Uwch, ac sydd eisiau cymryd y cam nesaf a rhoi cynnig ar lyfrau nad ydyn nhw wediâu hysgrifennu i ddysgwyr.
Bydda iân cynnwys fy argymhellion i, a gobeithio argymhellion cwpl o siopau llyfrau Cymraeg ac argymhellion y Ganolfan Dysgu Cymraeg Genedlaethol a thiwtoriaid Cymraeg. Dw i hefyd eisiau cynnwys argymhellion dysgwyr eraill a bydda i wrth fy modd os oes unrhyw un eisiau cyfrannu.
Bydda i angen teitl y llyfr, enwâr awdur a brawddeg neu ddwy i esbonio pam y byddwch chiân ei argymell - e.e. nad oes llawer o dafodiaeth neu nad ywâr iaith yn rhy ffurfiol. Gallwch chi bostio fan hyn neu anfon ebost ata i - mattdspry@yahoo.co.uk
Diolch!
Matt Spry
@deborah-ssiw
Helynt - Rebecca Roberts
This book was reviewed earlier by @caroline-18 so Iâm just seconding what was said here.
From the back cover âŠ
Missing the bus to school can change your life âŠ
Rachel decides to go on an adventure in Rhyl town instead of going home (after all, the bailiffs have taken dadâs car), then finding herself in a night club on the front. There, she meets Shane, a handsome man, full of mystery who knows something about her past ⊠a secret that can demolish her family. But Rachel is itching to get the truth out of him âŠ
Probably aimed at mid to late teenagers (Rachel, the main character, is 15) it does lack some of the grittiness youâd find in an adult novel but that doesnât take away from the story. Quite a lot of the subject matter deals with bullying and domestic abuse and does quite a good job of explaining that itâs not all about the physical aspect and that mental abuse/bullying also causes long term damage. Itâs written from Rachelâs point of view as if sheâd written the novel.
A very well written book that wouldnât be out of reach for all but the earliest of learners. Intermediate readers will have no problems getting through this.
Thank you everyone who has contributed to this thread. Your recommendations came in very handy on a recent trawl round various bookshops in South Wales.
Pum Diwrnod a Phriodas - Marlyn Samuel
This is Marlynâs 5th book and, although Iâve really enjoyed every one of them, Iâve got to say I think this one is the best. Itâs got some real laugh out loud moments and some very heart warming, blurry eyed parts too.
Translated from the back cover âŠ
When her youngest son decided to marry in Italy, Carys was looking forward to enjoying Sorrento, and of course, Gethin and Rebecaâs wedding. Being in the company of her oldest son and his family, and not forgetting her mum Thelma, was hard work to say the least! But everyone was in for a shock when a special guest arrived.
Iâm sure Marlyn must use âresearch for a bookâ as an excuse to visit some lovely places. This one, for the most part, is based in Sorrento, Italy, and sheâs done a great job in making it sound like the perfect holiday destination. The characters, again, are very likable and recognisable. Thelma, Carysâs mum, for example, could quite easily have been based on my mother-in-law ⊠itâs uncanny. And I have to say that Iâve laughed at Thelmaâs antics whereas the MIL just drives me up the wall.
This has been a great escape while being forced into resting after an injury.
The same as I wrote for Cicioâr Bwced, Llwch yn yr Haul, MilionĂȘrs and Cwcw ⊠This is a grown-upâs book so not an easy read like those aimed at teenagers or learners but I wouldnât say it was difficult either. Marlyn uses straightforward, simple language thatâs very accessible so I wouldnât think it would be impossible even for beginners and certainly ok for intermediate readers.
Iâve just finished I Botany Bay by Bethan Gwanas.
The book tells the story of Ann Lewis from Dolgellau, a maid in the nineteenth century. And, well, you can guess from the title what happens to herâŠ
Now I am someone who canât watch shows where the characters make obviously terrible decisions, so I spent the first half of this book yelling âNo, donât do it, Ann!â And then I procrastinated and put the book down for a week when she was about to do the thing, because I didnât want to watch it play out. It didnât help that Ann is eighteen and I amâŠnotâŠbecause she acts her age, and I found eighteen year olds confusing even when I was eighteen.
However I found the second half very moving, and in true Bethan Gwanas style thereâs a sting in the tail.
I didnât find it particularly difficult, but probably not one for a novice reader just due to vocab. (Historical novels are always harder on vocab.)
I recently read I Botany Bay too @caroline-18. I found the story a bit slow at the start but had become invested in the main character (didnât want her to do it / wanted to find out what happened to her) so I didnât put the book down and finished it fairly quickly. I wasnât disappointed, although I was emotionally wrung out by the time I reached the end. But if someoneâs writing can stir your emotions thatâs a good sign in my view,
I do enjoy historical novels where you can recognise actual facts and characters amongst the fiction. I was reading Here be Dragons by Sharon Penman at the same time which I also thoroughly enjoyed. For anyone interested, hereâs a synopsis:
Thirteenth-century Wales is a divided country, ever at the mercy of Englandâs ruthless, power-hungry King John. Then Llewelyn, Prince of North Wales, secures an uneasy truce with England by marrying the English kingâs beloved, illegitimate daughter, Joanna. Reluctant to wed her fatherâs bitter enemy, Joanna slowly grows to love her charismatic and courageous husband who dreams of uniting Wales. But as Johnâs attentions turn again and again to subduing Walesâand LlewelynâJoanna must decide to which of these powerful men she owes her loyalty and love.
Next up, two fairly short books: Dirgel Ddyn by Mihangel Morgan and O Ran by Mererid Hopwood.
Dirgel Dyn is about a young man who scrapes a living teaching Welsh literature at night classes in the early nineties. In an effort to keep the numbers up so the class can continue, he enrols a fake student (the titular Dirgel Ddyn) by the name of Ann Griffiths⊠Only for an Ann Griffiths to turn upâŠ
Told through the main characterâs eyes, we learn Annâs story, meet his neighbours and students, and ruminate on Welsh literature and the golden age of film.
O Ran is also narrated by the protagonist, told in flashbacks as she travels home to Cardiff on the Paddington train. As she reads the proofs of a tribute to her father, shortly to be published, she goes down memory lane, looking back at her childhood.
Iâd say both books are fairly accessible to learners as theyâre short and the language wasnât too hard. However theyâre not genre fiction, so itâs not always so easy to just guess where any particular page is going. You know, in a detective novel you can use what you know about detective novels to work out whatâs going on even if thereâs a lot of unfamiliar vocab, but you canât with either of these.
However both interesting reads from key figures on the contemporary literary scene, so worth giving a go, especially if youâve read through the standard recommendations already.
I enjoyed both of these Caroline! Thereâs a sequel to Dirgel Dyn called Dirgel Dynas too Whatâs your next challenge after reading all the TGAU texts? I was thinking of reading the âLlyfr y Flwyddynâ's I finished âMartha, Jac a Siancoâ gan Caryl Lewis last night which was a winner. I really recommend it - itâs very,very good!!
I absolutely loved this book and read it a couple of times. Iâm sure Iâll read it again!
I really enjoy Caryl Lewisâs style of writing; in fact her book more for teenagers than adults Naw Mis was one that I tackled fairly early on and although itâs a long book, I found the level of Welsh quite comprehensible for someone without a lot of Welsh reading experience under their belt.
I agree Deborah - Naw Mis is very readable! If you liked Marth, Jac a Sianco then I think youâll like Y Bwythyn too - that was the first Caryl Lewis book I tried. Its another good story - sheâs got a great imagination
Yes, I have Y Bwthyn as well, and Plu
No specific plans. I rang Jo at Cantamil to ask for suggestions and came away with a small mountain of books, so my next challenge is quite simply to read them!
Incidentally, I was right chuffed about that. Itâs the first time Iâve used âWelsh in the wildâ ie not in a lesson or conversation practice. We had a lovely chat.
Theyâre very nice people in âCantamilâ - well worth a visit when in Caerdydd!
So, next up one of Joâs suggestions. She recommended Ioan Kidd and I selected Dewis.
At her sixtieth birthday, surrounded by husband, ex-husband, children, and grandchildren, Mari suddenly finds herself unable to cut the cake. Her left hand just canât grip the knife.
As the implications of this unfold, the story flips between past and present. What choices will Mari make?
I really, really enjoyed this book. The characters were really engaging and I genuinely cared about them all. At the end of the day, this story could be any of us.
Linguistically, very Southern! But once I got used to it not that hard.
Definite recommend!