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Love and Other PossibilitiesLewis Davies View more titles by 'Lewis Davies'
ISBN: 9781905762040 (1905762046)Publication Date December 2007
Publisher: Parthian Books, Cardigan
Format: Paperback, 203x127 mm, 136 pages Language: English Ordered on request Our Price: £6.99 
Love and Other Possibilities
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English Book of the Month: January 2008
A volume of short stories, offering a world of escape and adventure by award-winning writer Lewis Davies. Paintings, films, soap stars, taxi fares, carpentry, sex, playwriting, murder, ferries, India, trains, Sri Lanka, Spain, currency, Wales, dissection, medicine, Cardiff, monkeys, war ... they're all in this book!

Cyfrol o straeon byrion, yn cynnig byd o antur, gan yr awdur nodedig Lewis Davies. Darluniau, ffilmiau, sêr operâu sebon, prisiau tacsis, gwaith saer, rhyw, ysgrifennu dramâu, llofruddiaeth, llongau, India, trenau, Sri Lanka, Sbaen, arian, Cymru, dadelfennu, meddygaeth, Caerdydd, mwncïod, rhyfel ... maen nhw i gyd yn y gyfrol hon!
This slim volume of nine short stories by award-winning writer Lewis Davies offers far more than initially meets the eye. Beginning with the achingly simple tale of ‘Mr Roopratna’s Chocolate’, which won the prestigious Rhys Davies Short Story Award, Davies embarks on a journey that takes us into Sri Lanka, Wales, Spain, India, Morocco and the lives and minds of his characters. His spare prose has an inexplicable magic that metamorphoses the exotic into the familiar and vice versa, creating a sense of mild disorientation and unreality that makes you begin to see the world in a different way.

Many of Davies’s characters are ordinary people living unexceptional lives, with whose expectations, fears and desires we can readily emphathise: steadfastly sweeping leaves to keep a Sri Lankan garden tidy for its temporary European occupant, Mr Roopratna fears for the safety of his sons, who are away fighting against the Tamil Tigers in the north, and hopes that he will see them again; settling into his new life in multicultural Cardiff and accepting its inevitable difficulties, Naz simply wishes for his sick child to be well; while Steve, a hard-working builder, would like to pay off his overdraft. They have ‘a quiet grace’ that serves as a sharp foil to the more consumerist attitudes of some of the other characters: James Willis who, having achieved his desire to meet his screen pin-up, rejects her because she has aged; the ignorant traveller who fails to recognise and honour Indian etiquette; and, in the final and perhaps definitive story, the successful, well-heeled Anthony, who is desperate for love yet apparently incapable of treating other people with genuine consideration or respect. Unable to look within, he deftly concludes that ‘the whole thing had become a burden. The expectations of happiness. Maybe he wasn’t meant to be happy.’

These finely-etched, deceptively-simple stories provide us with ‘glimpses of lives [we] could never see’ – some inspiring, some disquieting, all of them powerful in their evocation of the flawed beauty of humanity.

Suzy Ceulan Hughes

It is possible to use this review for promotional purposes, but the following acknowledgment should be included: A review from www.gwales.com, with the permission of the Welsh Books Council.

Gellir defnyddio'r adolygiad hwn at bwrpas hybu, ond gofynnir i chi gynnwys y gydnabyddiaeth ganlynol: Adolygiad oddi ar www.gwales.com, trwy ganiatâd Cyngor Llyfrau Cymru.
Author Biography:
Lewis Davies is a writer and publisher. His work includes novels, plays, poetry and essays. His fiction includes the novels Work, Sex and Rugby, Tree of Crows and My Piece of Happiness. He is also a playwright with productions including Football and Spinning the Round Table both touring UK wide with several Theatre Wales nominations for best new work. His play Sex and Power at the Beau Rivage about the meeting of Rhys Davies and D H Lawrence in the French Mediterranean of Bandol was produced by Theatr Y Byd and also toured nationally. His travel book Freeways won the John Morgan Award. He won the Rhys Davies short story award for his story Mr Roopratna's Chocolate and he has recently been writing a series of books for children entitled Tai and the Tremorfa Troll.
Further Information:
The short stories in Love and other Possibilities offer a world of escape and adventure by award winning writer Lewis Davies Painting, films, soap stars, taxi fares, carpentry, sex, playwriting, murder, ferries, India, trains, Sri Lanka, Spain, currency, Wales, dissection, medicine, Cardiff, Jack Kerouac, monkeys, war, Jackfruit, Le Metro, the Medina, Tangiers, City Road.
REVIEWS
These diverting short stories, by award winner writer Lewis Davies, offer a world of escape and adventure. From Spain to Sri Lanka, the author takes us around the world on a whirlwind of spellbinding emotional honesty, facing varying and often difficult issues such as cultural identity, parental responsibility and love with deep provocative thought. The characters in each story are created so intricately that their innermost feelings and desires are brought vividly to life with every page.
Alice Terry, Western Mail
Love and Other Possibilities by Lewis Davies is a cosmopolitan collection of short stories, varied in tone but consistently high in quality. Written in a wonderfully elegant and unhurried prose style Davies demonstrates throughout a percipient eye for detail - not just in the visual sense but on the emotional plane too.
Cultural difference is a recurring theme in this book. Opening story Mr Roopratna's Chocolate (which won the Rhys Davies short story award) is set in rural Sri Lanka. A vacationing artist attempts to connect with the chocolate-loving native who tends the garden of his holiday bungalow. The gardener's Sisyphusian task of sweeping away the fallen leaves proves to be an apt metaphor as death, it seems, is always at hand in that beautiful but precarious corner of the world.
The cultural divide is more starkly drawn in Feeding the House Crows where the narrator has to deal with a begging sadhu who won't take no for an answer. When his luggage is later stolen on a train you wonder if sparing the sadhu a few rupees might have averted his nightmarish situation.
In The Stars Above the City a gay Welsh tourist is left with a slapped face after his cynical sexual advances are misinterpreted as sincere affection by the arab boy whom he has just seduced. Here the depiction of Tangiers and other Moroccan locales is an absolute delight.
Not all of Lewis's stories unfold in exotic locations though - just as much interest can be found in the domestic arena. The Fare set in urban Cardiff has a Pakistani driver traversing the city while he frets over the health of his sick son. In This Time of Year a Welsh carpenter attempts to balance his home life with the overtly masculine sphere of his working world. And in the disturbing To the Centre of the Volcano a man has to take on the responsibility of caring for his young son after his partner is killed in Spain.
As well as tales that work on an emotional level there are more intellectually playful stories on offer too. A fellow obsesses over a faded film star in the McEwan-esque An Immediate Man. Once again the protagonists don't quite connect leaving a pervading sense of unfulfilled desire. In Dave Tillers fantasy and reality are blurred as the identity of a soap opera actor becomes increasingly enmeshed with the character he plays. And in Doris and Ethanol on City Road a forensic examination of a corpse is an effective way of dissecting a woman's past life and character. Here, as in much of this collection, death casts a long shadow.
Anthony Brockway, BabylonWales.com
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