See yourself here?

In September 2014, the most visitors to this site were from the USA, the UK, Canada, Spain, and Australia.

In September 2014, the most visitors to this site were from the USA, the UK, Canada, Spain, and Australia.

The monthly data for September is now available! There were 845 unique visitors to this site, with the most coming from the countries highlighted in the map above. The posts that most people visited were about emerald, sage, daffodil, diamonds, and marigold. It’s always interesting to see which searches bring people to visit and what other pages/posts they look at once they are here.

Were these 5 subjects what brought YOU here for the first time? Please share below what you were looking for when you discovered www.stephenmorrisauthor.com!

The Mabinogion

"The Island of the Mighty" is the first volume in Evangeline Walter's 4-book series retelling the Welsh stories found in the Mabinogion.

“The Island of the Mighty” is the first volume in Evangeline Walter’s 4-book series retelling the Welsh stories found in the Mabinogion.

There have been many translations and retellings of the Welsh mythology known as the “Mabinogion.” Evangeline Walter has done the best job of retelling the stories for a modern adult reader. Lloyd Alexander brought several characters from the Mabinogion to life in his Prydain Chronicles for younger readers. Disney took two of Alexander’s books to use as the basis of their animated film, “The Black Cauldron.”

Apart from the difficulty in pronouncing the Welsh names (just remember the double LLs are pronounced like “chl”, an Eastern European rolling hocking sound in the back of your throat followed by the “L” sound and that double DDs are “th”), the stories in the Mabinogion are some of the most wonderful and fantastic in world folklore. But again, there is a lot of code: what does it mean to “hold the feet” of Math? Are his “feet” a euphemism for his sexual organs like in the Old Testament? And the sudden birth accounts that imply sex must have happened previously but is never directly referred to.

If you are looking for autumnal reading, I highly recommend the Mabinogion in one of its many forms!

Hear the BBC report about the Mabinogion here.