About Us | Contact Us | Print Page | Sign In | Join now
Youth Libraries Group
Group HomeGroup Home Blog Home Group Blogs

An Interview with Eloise Williams, author of 'The Mab'

Posted By Jacob Hope, 10 June 2022

To end our week long blog takeover celebrating the publication of The Mab, we are delighted to host an interview with author and the inaugural postholder for the Children's Laureate WalesEloise Williams.

 

Do you remember reading the Mabinogi when you were a kid?

 

No. Not at all. I think we may have done something to do with King Arthur at some point but there wasn’t a specific reference to Wales. I grew up in Llantrisant in Rhondda Cynon Taff, was a voracious reader, lived opposite a library and took home stacks of books all the time. It seems so strange that I didn’t know anything about these stories. I’m hopeful that The Mab will change this situation for lots of young people.

 

Why do you think stories are important?

 

They give us an insight to our ancestors. How they lived, their values, what they thought was important. It turns out that the things which mattered to them are still common themes in our lives today. Love, grief, fortune, war, friendship, the wisdom of listening to animals and nature, the way life can turn on a penny. Stories are such an important part of keeping the voices of the people alive. I hope that these stories will be a celebration of past and present and that they’ll be told in new voices in the future too.

 

Why did you want to retell the story of Blodeuwydd?

 

Blodeuwedd, like so many of the women of The Mab, is such an interesting character. A woman, conjured entirely from flowers by a magician because a cursed man wants a wife will surely have a lot to say about her situation? It was really interesting to explore her actions and the consequences of them in the ancient landscape they were originally set in but with 21st Century sensibilities. She’s inventive, cunning and manipulative, and why shouldn’t she be? She is taken from the freedom of her existence and forced into a life she doesn’t want. The extent to which she takes things to escape that life are murderous and I don’t want to give too much away, but they involve a bath and a goat.

 

What are some of your favourite bits from The Mab?

 

There are so many wonderful moments. Creepy bits and weird bits. Moving storylines and belly laughs. Nothing is as expected. The stories are surprising and strange and completely unpredictable! I like so many things about each of the stories and find something new in them with every reading. My favourite bits change daily.

 

Was there anything about the process of creating The Mab that you think has had a lasting effect on you?

 

Yes. Working collaboratively has been a joy. I’ve learned such a lot from creating The Mab with Matt Brown. He is just brilliantly calm and focussed, where I am more tempestuous and impulsive. He has a unique style of comedy and is such a generous and hardworking person to collaborate with. Writing can be a very solitary career, and it has been really fantastic to have someone there to bounce ideas off. The whole process has been truly amazing. It has opened my eyes to a whole new world of possibilities.

 

A big thank you to Eloise Williams for the incredible interview.  Special thanks too, to Max Low, illustrator of the The Mab for use of its brilliant cover.

 

 

 

Tags:  Interview  Myth  Myths  Reading  Reading for Pleasure  Wales  Welsh 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Animals of the Mab

Posted By Jacob Hope, 08 June 2022

For day three of our blog takeover to celebrate the publication of The Mab we are delighted to welcome author Matt Brown back to the blog to introduce us to some of the animals that appear in The Mab and to consider their roles.

 

For as long as people have told stories, animals have always played an important role in storytelling. The Mab is full of animals and they are always trying to tell us something. Animals carry messages and people, they are used as portals to the Otherworld, or become mighty foes that our heroes need to overcome. They are also used to show traits about certain people or situations. They can even tell us something about the values people had in the ancient world in which the Mabinogi is set, you just have to know how to listen to what they say.

 

In the time when the Mabinogi was first written down, people had a deep respect for animals and the natural world, which you can see in the story, The Amazing Eight. At the beginning of their first task, the Amazing Eight seek the help of animals to find the legendary hunter Mabon ap Modron. Our heroes know that animals possess great knowledge and understanding about the world and ask the advice of a blackbird, a stag, an owl, an eagle. The order that they ask the animals in is symbolic of the hierarchy of importance that these animals once had.

 

In order to find Mabon ap Madron, the Amazing Eight ride on the back of a gigantic salmon. It’s no wonder that ancient storytellers used a salmon to help the Amazing Eight in their quest. Salmon travel between salt and fresh waters and so are used to navigating between two different worlds (the real world and the Otherworld). They perform a miraculous feat by travelling upstream and can even scale waterfalls so they are used to overcoming obstacles in pursuit of their goal.

 

If you see a stag in The Mab you can be certain that someone is about to have an adventure where they have to prove their strength or courage. Stags were, and still are, a high-status animal. In both Peredur, the Monster and the Serpent of the Cairn and Geraint, Enid and the Big Knight Fight, the stories begin with a hunt for a stag. Both hunts are used to show how fearless and bold Peredur and Geraint are. The hunt is not the focus of either story but are used as a springboard for adventure.

 

Horses are another high-status animal that tell us that the rider is important, either in terms of the position they hold in society or the position they hold in the story. In Rhiannon, Pwyll and the Hideous Claw, Rhiannon first appears “caught in a blade of sunlight” riding “her magnificent shining white horse”. We know from this description of her steed that Rhiannon is extraordinary, maybe even Otherwordly. This suspicion is proven true when later, “Pwyll’s horse trotted up to her and dipped its head, as if it were bowing in front of a queen.” Rhiannon is often thought to be a representation of a horse Goddess. In this story, her horse is a symbol of her divinity and power.

 

Birds too appear for a variety of reasons in The Mab. Sometimes characters transform into birds, or they talk to birds, or use birds to carry messages.  In The Strange and Spectacular Dream of Rhonabwy the Restless, Rhonabwy uses ravens to symbolise the bandits’ greed and low-down, rotten selfishness. He also uses the call of the raven as a way of signalling to the prince’s men to come and arrest the bandits.

 

When you read the stories in The Mab, perhaps the animals will speak to you. Maybe, like in the Amazing Eight, they will pass on their deep knowledge and understanding about the world.

 

A big thank you to Matt Brown for writing this  brilliant blog feature for us.  You can find out more about The Mab every day this week during our blog takeover and might like to think about attending the YLG Wales Zoom training day Empathy in Your Library which includes a conversation with Eloise Williams and Matt Brown who will be discussing The Mab with librarian extraordinaire Alison King.  Special thanks too, to Max Low, illustrator of the The Mab for use of its brilliant cover and the image of Branwen.

 

 

 Attached Thumbnails:

Tags:  Myth  Reading  Reading for Pleasure  Wales  Welsh 

PermalinkComments (0)
 

Women of the Mab

Posted By Jacob Hope, 07 June 2022

During day two of our blog takeover to celebrate the publication of The Mab we are delighted to welcome author and the inaugural postholder for the Children's Laureate Wales, Eloise Williams to introduce us to some of the women of The Mab.

 

In stories from the olden days, women are often there to look pretty, be a foil to the stories of men, and not say much. They wave fond farewells as the men ride off on horseback to have great adventures. Sometimes it’s possible to think that these women didn’t have any voices at all.

 

Not so in The Mab! The women of The Mab have a lot to say. They are fierce and bold, clever and witty, smart and resilient. They make decisions and they make mistakes. They are very important people in their stories, and we are proud to give them voices.

 

In Rhiannon, Pwyll and the Hideous Claw women are central to the story. Rhiannon, a powerful, enchanting woman from the Otherworld joins this world only to face terrible trickery and punishment for a crime she didn’t commit. She is accused of murdering her own child when it has actually been stolen by a hideous, monstrous claw. Who has tricked her? Her maids, and to protect their own skin because they slept as the baby was taken. As punishment, Rhiannon is forced to carry people on her back as if she is a horse. Yes, you’re right, these stories are weird.

 

Blodeuwedd, in Meadowsweet and Magic is a woman conjured entirely from flowers because a man called Lleu wants a wife, and his mother has cursed him that he may never be married to a human. Unhappy with the arrangement, Blodeuwedd plots to kill Lleu. Unfortunately, for her he has protection charms placed around him which mean that he can only be killed in very specific circumstances. Luckily, Blodeuwedd is extremely inventive and spends a whole year thinking up ways to murder Lleu. I don’t want to give too much away but her plan involves a goat and a bath!

 

In Branwen and the Cauldron of Rebirth we meet the main character Branwen as she listens to the wisdom of birds while men wage war.  Branwen’s mother has taught her to open her heart in times of trouble. The starlings talk to Branwen and she agrees that love will conquer all. Where there is bloodshed and heartache and grief, she chooses an unusual way to continue spreading her message of love, changing herself and her son into birds.

 

Women often save the day in the stories of The Mab. Cigfa in Happily Ever After has fire in her belly, rides her horse like a warrior, and uses her intuition to expose the truth of an enchantment. Her story tells us of how real life is much more interesting than your typical happy ever after. In Luned and the Magic Ring, the title character uses a bluestone and a ring which render the wearer invisible to help someone escape certain death, but she also employs logical thinking and her powers of intellect to save the day.

 

We can’t wait for you to meet these women. They aren’t wholly good or bad. They aren’t just there to wave weeping farewells from castle windows. They are strong and wild, magical and powerful, fallible and free. They have thoughts and ideas and solve problems with their quick wit and intelligence. Perhaps they will remind you of the women in your own life?

 

A big thank you to Eloise Williams for writing this fantastic blog feature for us.  You can find out more about The Mab every day this week during our blog takeover and might like to think about attending the YLG Wales Zoom training day Empathy in Your Librarywhich includes a conversation with Eloise Williams and Matt Brown who will be discussing The Mab with librarian extraordinaire Alison King.  Special thanks too, to Max Low, illustrator of the The Mab for use of its brilliant cover and the image of Blodeuwedd.

 

 

 Attached Thumbnails:

Tags:  Myth  Reading  Reading for Pleasure  Short Stories  Wales  Welsh  Women 

PermalinkComments (0)