John Llewelyn Rhys (1911-1940) was born in Abergavenny, Wales, in the
United Kingdom. He published The Flying Shadow in 1936 (also reissued by
Handheld Press), and in 1939 published The World Owes Me A Living
(filmed in 1945). Both were powerful novels about British aviation in
the 1930s: the planes, the pilots, their need to be in the air, their
skill and bravery, their hard-drinking lives, the long-distance
record-breaking attempts, and death through accidents and taking one
risk too many.
This new edition of England is My Village, and The World Owes Me A
Living is a stunning rediscovery of this brilliant writer. 'Had he
lived, ' an obituary noted, 'he might have become the Kipling of the
RAF.' Rhys's prose is spare and direct, with no words wasted. The
dialogue is immediate, conveying mood, emotion, relationships, character
and action with precision. The stories date from 1936 to 1940 and remind
us of the responsibilities placed on very young men flying thousands of
feet up in the air in boxes of metal, petrol and canvas.
The Introduction is written by Kate Macdonald and Luke Seaber.