Russell Celyn Jones


Russell Celyn Jones is a British writer and academic, born in London on 24 June 1952 and brought up in Swansea, Wales. He has written novels, mostly focused on crime and issues of guilt and morality, and also teaches creative writing. He may be best known for Ten Seconds from the Sun about the rehabilitation of a child murderer. Jones received his B.A. degree from University College London and his M.F.A. from the University of Iowa. He has three children: Rebecca, Rachel, and Benjamin. When he is not teaching or writing, Celyn Jones is often seen attending various art galleries, theatre productions, and readings in bookstores. He is an adamant political and social activist, and never holds back standing up for the rights of others. He has an unparalleled effect on his students, who often make the effort to stay in contact with him long after schooling.

Books

''Soldiers and Innocents''

His first novel, Soldiers and Innocents is about a father and son who both pursued military careers, the former in North Africa in World War II, the latter in the more morally complex setting of the Northern Irish Troubles. The novel was made into a six-part series for BBC Radio 4 and won the David Higham Prize.

''The Eros Hunter''

The Eros Hunter is a 1998 crime novel about police investigating paedophilia in London. The Independent found its oblique, subtle approach to be impressive, while conceding that some crime fans may prefer more direct thrills.

''Surface Tension''

His novel Surface Tension has central characters Mark and Geena, brother and sister, whose parents fled Apartheid-era South Africa. After finding out that Geena was adopted they return to South Africa to uncover their family secrets. The Guardian praised it for both its style and its themes of identity, morality, and power.

''Ten Seconds from the Sun''

Ten Seconds from the Sun is a novel about a Thames river tug boat captain who as a 12-year-old was sent to jail for murder but on completing his sentence was released and allowed to rejoin society, until a car accident brings him together with a figure from his past, his former partner in crime and half-sister Celestine. The Observer found it at once a "clever psychological thriller" and a deeper reflection on guilt, memory, truth, and other issues. The Telegraph found it slightly overburdened by research but a "tightly written" exploration of a societal taboo. The novel won the Weishanhu Prize in China for the best foreign novel.

''The Ninth Wave''

The Welsh prose epic the Mabinogion provides the raw material for The Ninth Wave, part of a series in which publisher Seren asked writers to reinterpret the classic Welsh stories. Celyn Jones updates "Pwyll, Lord of Dyfed" to an alternate reality where modern consumerism and recreational drugs exist alongside mounted knights.

Selected bibliography