Drawing on the age-old appeal of folklore (and a good ghost story), this
new collection of short fiction is centred around the act of collecting
and recovering the past. As the rich, haunting stories unfold, there are
dangerous obsessions with iconic, sacrosanct objects, and puzzling and
poignant conversations with the other side.
Then, in the central novella 'The Collectors', two doctors and a
folklorist meet in northern Brittany in 1898, determined to prove that
the scourge of leprosy still exists. But their search soon draws them
into a dark, watchful landscape where superstition is rife.
"A considerable achievement."
Stevie Davies, New Welsh Review on The Breathing
Mary-Ann Constantine is a research fellow at Aberystwyth,
specialising in Welsh and Breton Romanticism. Her short stories have
appeared over a number of years in the New Welsh Review and Planet,
and her first collection, The Breathing, was published by Planet in
2008.