MARY CONWAY revels in a powerful reminder that human lives are not defined by physical perfection
Glyndwr: To Arms by Moelwyn Jones (Y Lolfa £7.99)
THIS is the second in Moelwyn Jones’s trilogy of novels on the life of celebrated Welsh hero, military genius and guerilla warrior Owain Glyndwr, whose military techniques, it’s been claimed, were a model for Che Guevara and Fidel Castro.
The narrative is seen through the eyes of Glyndwr’s court poet Gruffudd ap Caradog, protege of Iolo Goch, one of Wales’s finest bards in the late medieval period. While closely following the historical evidence, Jones gives an admirable portrayal of the importance of the poet in Welsh court society as entertainer, confidante and PR man, a role similar to that of poets in Ireland and Iceland and the troubadours of southern France.
A remarkable excavation in the Netherlands has raised hopes of locating the grave of Louis XIV’s famed captain of the King’s Musketeers. JOHN CALLOW introduces the real figure behind the hero of Dumas’s novels
In his fortnightly Borderlands column, MARK SEDDON visits overgrown forts along Offa’s Dyke and reflects on wars past and present
BRENT CUTLER is intrigued by the imperialist, supremacist and contradictory history of a word that is used all too easily
HEIDI NORMAN welcomes a new history of the Aboriginal resistance to white settlers in New South Wales


