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Whose Song to Sing

A Memoir

Ben Wildsmith

$39.99

Hardback

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English
Calon
05 February 2026
How does an adopted person construct their identity? In this collection of essays, Ben Wildsmith relates the key events of a turbulent life and considers the factors that shaped his nature.

Examining notions of culture, belonging, authenticity and family, Whose Song to Sing? takes us from 1970s Birmingham to South Wales in the 2020s, via America, Australia and Thailand.

Wildsmith offers an adoptee's take on society

ironic and occasionally caustic

as he struggles to carve out a space within it. As family life disintegrates, he seeks refuge in culture, always returning to the songs and stories of the Valleys, the gift of his adoptive grandfather.

We follow a path from childhood privilege to addiction and despair, before the healing power of community offers a route to happiness.

Unflinching and frequently comic, Whose Song to Sing? shows how establishing a viable identity from uncertain materials can be a creative act, and a life's work.
By:  
Imprint:   Calon
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 135mm, 
ISBN:   9781915279989
ISBN 10:   1915279984
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Foreword by Jon Gower A journey around Wales Introduction The chosen one Clambering out of the Capri Gwlad! Gwlad! If that ain’t country Póg mo thóin Chimpanzee eyes That’s a tribe, man Myfanwy Indoor playtime Grit in the sponge Monkey paws Epilogue Acknowledgements

Ben Wildsmith was born in Birmingham when Chuck Berry's 'My Ding a Ling' was number one in the charts. He's been a fright, a new start, a doley, a bank clerk, a laundryman, a gardener, a liability, a lecturer, a shopkeeper, a musician and a friend. He's a Nation. Cymru columnist, and a Hay Festival Writer@Work whose poetry has appeared in Red Poets and Poetry Wales. Ben is a support worker with Cardiff's homeless community. He lives in Rhondda Fach with his wife, Susie, and an assortment of questionable notions.

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