Richard Gwyn grew up in Breconshire. He studied anthropology at the London School of Economics, but dropped out after two years and after a brief career as a punk poet spent the decade of the 1980s travelling around the Mediterranean, working on fishing boats and as a waiter in Greece, and as an agricultural labourer in France and Spain. Following several years of alcoholic vagabondage he fell seriously ill in Barcelona. His account of these years appears in
The Vagabond’s Breakfast (which won Wales Book of the Year for non-fiction in 2012). Gwyn started out as a poet, and has published four collections, most recently
Stowaway: A Levantine Adventure (2018), and is editor of an anthology of work by Welsh poets,
The Pterodactyl’s Wing (2003). His first novel,
The Colour of a Dog Running Away (2005), set in Barcelona, was translated into many languages and brought him international recognition. His other novels include
Deep Hanging Out (2007)) and, most recently,
The Blue Tent (2019), which appeared in French translation as
Les Invités (Gallimard 2022). He is a translator from Spanish, specialising in poetry and short fiction. Between 2011 and 2016 he travelled widely in South America, which resulted in
The Other Tiger, a major anthology of contemporary Latin American poetry (2016). His other translations from Spanish include
Impossible Loves by Darío Jaramillo and
Invisible Dog by Fabio Morábito. For ten years he was Professor of Creative and Critical Writing at Cardiff University.
Read the blog of Richard Gwyn's alter-ego, Ricardo Blanco here.
Watch Richard discuss and read from his book, The Blue Tent, here, and discuss his latest collection of poetry, Stowaway: A Levantine Journey and reads three poems from the collection here.