Richard Owain Roberts
Richard Owain Roberts is a Welsh author. He is the author of two books, All The Places We Lived and Hello Friend We Missed You.
His short stories and non-fiction have been published in VICE, The Quietus, , Plastik magazine, For Every Year, Word Riot, The Guardian, New Welsh Review.
Known for his elusive reputation, Roberts has been described as "an important new voice in fiction, not just in Wales".
Early life and education
Roberts was born and raised on Ynys Môn, his first language is Welsh and he has made a point of refusing to recognise the name Anglesey in interviews.Describing his time on Ynys Môn, Roberts said: "It was very tranquil and idyllic but also it’s one of the most deprived places in Wales. I wasn’t fully aware of this at the time, it was probably just normal to me. A lot of people at my school arrived in Jaguars and Range Rovers but my friend and I used to show up in an old Lada. Seems really defiant somehow. I don’t know."
Roberts studied English Literature at the University of Manchester before joining the Creative Writing MA programme at Liverpool John Moores University, where he graduated with a distinction.
After completing his studies, he moved back to Wales and Cardiff. Speaking about Cardiff, Roberts said:
"As a young capital city we have the advantage of having no current reputation internationally. Someone else might choose to see that as a negative – it’s a positive though because it means we have a blank canvas to create something incredible. But we still have over-ground car parks, and we’re still putting up office/residential blocks that look a decade old already. Every single piece of new architecture should be the boldest statement of individualism, within an overriding city narrative. We should be building a city that looks like 2115. And this is possible. Go to SCI-Arc or the RDAFA and give someone a chance to make something awesome for us."
''All The Places We Lived''
All The Places We Lived was published by Parthian Books in May 2015.Roberts said he wrote most of the book at Chapter Arts Centre while listening to Kanye West: "I listened to 808 & Heartbreak during the writing period for All The Places We Lived and then Yeezus during editing."
The book features a story about two characters named Kanye and Kim, which many reviewers have taken to be West and his wife Kim Kardashian. It also features characters called James, Dave and Betsy Lou Franco and Eazy-E.
Wales Arts Review selected it as one of their summer reads for 2015, João Morais stating that, "Read it if you like the understated satirical style of Bret Easton Ellis, or read it if you understand how Frank and April Wheeler can feel both alone yet together in Richard Yates’ Revolutionary Road. But more than anything, read it if you like great fiction."
Bridey Heing, writing for Sabotage Reviews, stated that, "For the author, being human means a very particular brand of self-sabotage and misanthropy... he is more of an observer, documenting each interaction and each movement without commentary. His prose balances starkness with a unique lyricism borne of repetition, a flowing sort of growth from sentence to sentence. The writing is lean, with no extra filler to soften its harsh edges."
Cult book review website Workshy Fop stated that, "Roberts creates strange, disjointed narratives; his prose features lists, brutally short sentences, social media updates and offbeat pop-culture references. The vignettes presented in All The Places We Lived reflect the influence of social media and marketing on our perception of the world and the people around us, with a darkly comic humour."
Serbia tour and ''Terrence Malick''
The Serbian translation of All The Places We Lived was released in November 2017 by Serbian publishing house Partizanska Knjiga.In his foreword, an essay titled 'Kim is Offline', the novelist and critic Srđan Srdić describes Richard Owain Roberts as a natural successor to David Foster Wallace and 'authentic interpreter of contemporary hipster hell'.
The forthcoming documentary, ULTRA, is set to cover Roberts' time in Serbia promoting the translation.
In September 2019, Roberts won the Penfro short story prize, judged by Niall Griffiths, for his story Terrence Malick.
Writing in Wales Arts Review, Nigel Jarrett described the story as, "fresh, fugitive, dreamlike, yet one in which the writer is in complete control of the aesthetic".
In a review for Nation.Cymru, Jon Gower compared Roberts' writing to Paul Auster and said, "shot through with references to popular culture, cocaine and Pringles, the story acts as a playful, edgy advert for Roberts’ forthcoming debut novel".
The Zero Point Fiction podcast has released an episode with Roberts reading the story.
''Hello Friend We Missed You''
Robert's second book Hello Friend We Missed You is set to be published by Parthian Books in October 2020. The Irish Times included it on a list of "books to watch out for" from independent publishers in 2020.It is described by the publisher as: "A deeply poignant and bleakly comic debut novel about loneliness, the 'violent revenge thriller' category on Netflix, solipsism, rural gentrification, Jack Black, and learning to exist in the least excruciating way possible."
The novel was described in Wales Arts Review as "a witty and imaginative reflection on grief, loss and the importance of moving forward".
New Welsh Review compared Roberts to Bret Easton Ellis and said he was "able to perfectly capture the nihilism and pop culture of the adult millennial generation."
As with Roberts' short fiction debut All The Places We Lived, the Serbian language rights for Hello Friend We Missed You have been acquired by Partizanska Knjiga, the first time Parthian Books have sold foreign translation rights ahead of English language publication.
According to the publisher, "Roberts follows Jarett Kobek, Ben Lerner and Miranda July as the latest English-language novelist to have his work translated into Serbian."
In March 2020, Wales Arts Review published a video of Roberts reading from the novel as part of its Digithon festival.
A short clip of ULTRA was also released as part of the festival, organised in response to the coronavirus pandemic.
Personal life and controversies
After the release of his first book, Roberts was "involved in a couple of spats that played out in the public forum".writing in Wales Arts Review, Bethan Tachwedd said: "One centred on a business using his name without permission, the second surrounding an publicly open and viewable Google Doc response to an Independent article that he took umbrage to."
Roberts' evasive and truculent approach to answering questions led Tachwedd to compare him to Joffrey Baratheon from the Game of Thrones television series.
He currently lives in Cardiff with his wife, daughters, and cat, Abi The God. He has worked as a teacher at Cardiff prison as well as delivering leaflets for "less than minimum wage".
Outside of writing, Roberts likes to "read sports management biographies on my wife’s Kindle, look at Jaden and Willow’s Twitter, walk aimlessly around trying to befriend the wildlife".