Dylan Thomas’s letters bring the fascinating and tempestuous poet and his times to life in a way that no biography can.
The letters begin in the poet’s schooldays and end just before his death in New York at the age of 39. In between, he loved, wrote, drank, begged and borrowed his way through a flamboyant life. He was an enthusiastic critic of other writers’ work and the letters are full of his thoughts on the work of his contemporaries, from T.S. Eliot and W.H. Auden to Stephen Spender and Cecil Day-Lewis.
A lifetime of letters tell a remarkable story, each taking the reader a little further along the path of the poet’s self-destruction, but written with such verve and lyricism that somehow the reader’s sympathies never quite abandon him.

That's Not My Parrot
Big Feelings
Birds
August Blue
Room On the Broom
"You Live Where?!"
The Squirrels Who Squabbled
Last
Spaghetti Hunters : A Duck and Tiny Horse Adventure
Richard Scarry's Peasant Pig and the Terrible Dragon
Sanctuary
I Can't Sleep
This Stolen Land : A People's History of the Gwent Levels
Edible Seashore : No. 5
The Sea Swallow and the Humpback Whale
King of the Sky
One Hundred Years of Solitude
The Cat in the Hat
Perfectly Norman
Oi Puppies!
Elmer and the Lost Treasure
One small voice
Wild Card : Let the Tarot Tell Your Story
Transatlantic Vistas : On the Literatures of Wales and the United States
Try the Wilderness First : Eric Gill and David Jones at Capel-y-ffin
Tryweryn - A Nation Awakes - The Story of a Welsh Freedom Fighter : The Story of a Welsh Freedom Fighter
I Like to Put Food in My Welly
Wales Before 1536


