This new addition to the Real Series explores the town of Hay-on-Wye,
home to the prestigious the Hay Literature Festival and How the Light
Gets In festival, and Town of Books. Kate Noakes ventures into its
hinterland, which is historically so much a part of the town too. The
Black Mountains to the south, the river and Clyro to the north, rural
Herefordshire to the east and out towards Brecon to the west fall into
her territory, a rich and varied area, which appears in so many travel
guides and so much literature, and in the DNA of Hay locals as their
patch.
In the town Noakes explores the Festival and the many bookshops oriented
towards the visitor, which give Hay-on-Wye its rich cultural identity.
But she also goes beyond, into the old town, the markets and shops of
the locals and the cafés and galleries of more fashionable incomers and
tourists. She discovers that Hay is a town with a split personality of
rural culture on the one hand and almost metropolitan culture on the
other, with its growing numbers of second homes and incoming
good-lifers. Spiced by many local oddities Hay's story is also one
common of rural towns reinventing themselves in the face of general
'progress'. There's a sense in which Hay's history repeats itself, the
invention of the Town of Books being a response to changing times.
The beautiful countryside and dramatic mountains surrounding Hay also
bear witness to change and Noakes makes her own contribution to the
cultural heritage of an area which has inspired artists and in
particular writers, for centuries. This has been 'Kilvert Country' and
'Chatwin Country', and has also been populated by Arnold Wesker, Tom
Bullough, and Owen Sheers, and the artists Eric Gill and David Jones.
Real Hay is full of discoveries in a place that is familiar to many,
though not as familiar as we might think.