Rhys Hughes

Rhys Henry Hughes (born 1966, Cardiff, Wales) is a Welsh fantasy writer and essayist.[1]

Rhys Henry Hughes
Born1966
Cardiff, Wales
OccupationNovelist, short story writer
NationalityBritish
GenreAbsurdism, Fantasy, OuLiPo, Science Fiction
Website
rhysaurus.blogspot.com

Career

Born in Cardiff, Hughes has written in a variety of forms, from short stories to novels.

His long novel Engelbrecht Again! is a sequel to Maurice Richardson's 1950 cult classic The Exploits of Engelbrecht and is the most radical of Hughes's books, making extensive use of lipograms, typographical tricks, coded passages and other OuLiPo techniques.[2]

His main project consists of authoring a 1,000-story cycle of both tightly and loosely interconnected tales.[2]

Bibliography

Novels

  • The Percolated Stars: An Astro-Caffeine Romp in Three Cups Featuring Batavus Droogstoppel Merchant and Scientist and Bourgeois Monster: One Lump or Two? (RazorBlade Press; 2003)[2]
  • Engelbrecht Again! (Dead Letter Press; 2008; ISBN 978-0-9796335-4-6)
  • Mister Gum; Or: The Possibly Phoney Profundity of Puerility (Dog Horn Publishing; 2009)[2]
  • Twisthorn Bellow (Atomic Fez Publishing; 2010; ISBN 978-0-9811597-1-3)[2]
  • The Abnormalities of Stringent Strange (Meteor House; 2013; ISBN 978-0-983746-13-3)[2]
  • The Young Dictator (Pillar International Publishing; 2013; ISBN 978-0-9574598-3-0)[2]
  • Captains Stupendous; Or, the Fantastical Family Faraway (expansion of The Coandă Effect: A Corto Maltese Adventure) (Telos Moonrise; 2014; ISBN 978-1-84583-886-7[2]

Novellas

  • Eyelidiad (1996)[3]
  • Rawhead & Bloody Bones (1998)[4]
  • Elusive Plato (1998)[4]
  • The Crystal Cosmos (PS Publishing; December 2007; ISBN 978-1-905834-98-3)
  • The Coandă Effect (Ex Occidente Press; November 2010)
  • The Sticky Situations of Zwicky Fingers (Gloomy Seahorse Press; 2014; ISBN 978-1-291738-16-2)

Collections

  • Worming the Harpy and Other Bitter Pills (Tartarus Press, 1995;[3] ISBN 978-1-872621-20-3)
  • The Smell of Telescopes (Tartarus Press, 2000; ISBN 1-872621-44-9)[3]
  • Stories from a Lost Anthology (Tartarus Press, 2002; ISBN 978-1-872621-68-5)[4]
  • Nowhere Near Milk Wood (1997, expanded 2002)[4]
  • Journeys Beyond Advice (2002)[4]
  • A New Universal History of Infamy (2004): a parody of and homage to Jorge Luis Borges's collection A Universal History of Infamy.[4]
  • The Less Lonely Planet (Humdrumming, Ltd.; May 2008; ISBN 978-1-905532-52-0)
  • The Postmodern Mariner (Screaming Dreams; June 2008; ISBN 978-0-9555185-2-2)
  • The Brothel Creeper (Gray Friar Press; March 2011; ISBN 978-1-906331-22-1)[5]
  • Link Arms With Toads! (Chômu Press; May 2011; ISBN 978-1-907681-08-0)
  • Tallest Stories (Eibonvale Press; January 2013; ISBN 978-1-908125-16-3)
  • The Just Not So Stories (Exaggerated Press; October 2013; ISBN 978-1-291558-20-3)
  • More Than a Feline (Gloomy Seahorse Press; December 2013; ISBN 978-1-291619-27-0)
  • Flash in the Pantheon (Gloomy Seahorse Press; 2014; ISBN 978-1-291731-03-3)
  • Rhysop's Fables (Gloomy Seahorse Press; 2014; ISBN 978-1-291738-73-5)

Poetry

  • The Gloomy Seahorse (Gloomy Seahorse Press; 2014; ISBN 978-1-291715-03-3)

References

  1. "Rhys Hughes". The Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  2. "Hughes, Rhys". the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  3. S. T. Joshi (2006). Icons of Horror And the Supernatural: An Encyclopedia of our Worst Nightmares - Volume 1. Greenwood Press. p. 368. ISBN 0-313-33781-0.
  4. John Clute (2016). Pardon This Intrusion. Orion. p. 169. ISBN 978-1-4732-1979-3.
  5. See review of Brothel Creeper at The Future Fire
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