An historical novel set Wales before the Industrial Revolution, as human love tries to flower amidst squalor and serfdom.
Niall Griffiths Book order







- 2023
- 2019
Broken Ghost
- 368 pages
- 13 hours of reading
A Welsh community is drawn together and blown apart by a strange vision in the mountains: the huge spectre of a woman floating over a ridge. The people who live here in these mountains already have their own demons - drink, drugs, domestic violence, psychoses - but each character has a different experience of this strange apparition, a different reaction, and for some it will change everything. Is it a collective hallucination? A meteorological phenomenon? Whatever it is, they all saw something, early one morning on the shores of a mountain lake, something that will awaken in them powers and passions and, perhaps, a possibility of healing these broken people in a broken country. An examination of modern humanity's desperate need to live meaningfully and vividly in a mediated world - where individual autonomy is lost and the collective heart is atomised and exploited - this is a novel that gives voices to the marginalised, the dispossessed, the forgotten. Disturbing and unforgettable, darkly funny and deeply moving, written in a charged language that is vernacular, lyrical and hieratic all at once, Broken Ghost is - simultaneously - a howl of anguish and a summoning of gods.
- 2017
A thought provoking and inspiring story written for emerging readers, particularly those who are offenders, disaffected or at risk. Jerry is excited about taking his young son Stevie to watch the big match.
- 2015
A giant of modern literature, Niall Griffiths first poetry collection is every bit as exhilarating as his celebrated novels. Culled from two decades of notebooks, diaries and the sodden backs of beermats, Red Roar 20 Years of Words celebrates Griffith s journey towards ecstatic redemption through language. Here is poetry that strips the human experience back to its barest bones and exposes the raw and unflinching essence within.
- 2014
Sixteen-year-old Grace has dreams, and she knows how to make them come true: a little silicone and surgery here and there -nose, breasts, lips, hair, teeth, nails. When he sees how utterly Grace has changed, he realises how far the world has fallen since those days.
- 2011
Ten Pound Pom
- 200 pages
- 7 hours of reading
In 1976, Niall's family emigrated to Australia, as part of the GBP10 Pom scheme. He lived there for 3 years, moving from Brisbane to Perth in a souped- up station wagon. 30 years later, he returned to retrace his steps. This is his memoir.
- 2009
Post office
- 160 pages
- 6 hours of reading
Charles Bukowski's debut novel introduces his alter ego Henry Chinaski. Chinaski is a low life loser with a hand-to-mouth existence. His menial Post Office job supports his life of beer, one-night stands and race-tracks.
- 2008
Real Aberystwyth
- 208 pages
- 8 hours of reading
Aberystwyth is a vibrant Welsh town characterized by its bilingual community, rich history, and diverse population, including students and long-term residents. The guidebook explores its evolution from medieval origins to Victorian prominence, highlighting notable landmarks like the National Library of Wales and its unique cultural blend. The author intertwines personal experiences with historical insights, creating a captivating narrative that balances the ordinary with the extraordinary, making it an engaging read for both locals and visitors alike.
- 2008
Runt
- 160 pages
- 6 hours of reading
On leaving school a sixteen-year-old boy goes to live with his uncle on a remote Welsh hill-farm. The boy is a spiritual savant: an unwitting repository of folk memory from the margins, barely educated but possessed of extraordinary insights;
- 2008
Real Liverpool
- 208 pages
- 8 hours of reading
A quirky and frank depiction of Liverpool, in which the author considers its maritime and merchant histories, class divisions, sectarian divides, Celtic influences, and the siege mentality underpinning the celebrated Scouse humour. Written with a strong autobiographical element, the author tells his own story and interviews many people connected to the city.