Rhys Hughes

Rhys Henry Hughes
Born 1966
Cardiff, Wales
Occupation Novelist, short story writer
Nationality British
Genre Absurdism, Fantasy, OuLiPo, Science Fiction

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

Influences

Born in Cardiff, Hughes has written in a variety of forms, from short stories to novels, with a mix of influences, which include Italo Calvino, Milorad Pavić, Jorge Luis Borges, Stanisław Lem, Flann O'Brien and Donald Barthelme, occasionally creating "highly original and chimerical monsters".[1] He has been published in Postscripts among many other places.

Although he is not a member of OuLiPo, the international literary group that uses mathematics and logic to create texts that break the familiar patterns of "normal" writing, he is one of the few English-speaking practitioners of these methods. Some of his more experimental works can be considered examples of ergodic literature.[2]

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.[3]

His main project consists of authoring a 1,000-story cycle of both tightly and loosely interconnected tales. Hughes calls this grand cycle a "wheel", which in turn is formed by smaller "wheels within wheels".[4]

Bibliography

Novels

Novellas

Collections

Original foreign language books

Poetry

eBooks

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 S. T. Joshi. Icons of Horror And the Supernatural: An Encyclopedia of our Worst Nightmares - Volume 1. Greenwood Press. p. 368. ISBN 0-313-33781-0. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
  2. Supernatural Fiction Writers: Peter ... Google Books. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  3. "Engelbrecht Again!". Engelbrechtagain.blogspot.com. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  4. "An Interview With Rhys Hughes – Part 1 ~ AmeriCymru". Americymru.blogspot.com. 31 January 2009. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  5. See review of Brothel Creeper at
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