![]() ![]() The trust between writer and reader becomes diminished by the deception. The problem lies when you claim to have had that actual experience that you’re writing about, that somehow there is an element of memoir in your story. It’s quite possible for authors to research their topic and write a fabulous story, without actually experiencing it themselves. It is now believed, that at best, he had conversations with miners from Gilfach Goch, but every bio site I checked had conflicting information around this. He claimed to have spent some time down the mines in Gilfach Goch, whilst visiting his grandfather, but there is no record of him ever having done so. The next controversy surrounds Llewellyn’s claims about how he attained his knowledge to write this book. “ Only after his death was it discovered that his claim that he was born in St Davids, West Wales, was false.”īut still publishes his birth place as being St David’s, Wales, not Hendon, London, where he was actually born. ![]() Wikipedia discretely told me that Llewellyn was born in 1906 to Welsh parents. My first alert was when Karen Talk mentioned (in a comment/post that I cannot now find) that Llewellyn was not a Welsh author after all. But it quickly became apparent to me that there were a number of issues surrounding this work and the author. They’re big-hearted, community-minded, salt-of-the-earth folk. I thoroughly enjoyed my time with Huw and his large family. ![]()
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