From the top of Snowdon to the sea at Barmouth, the UNESCO slate landscapes to the exotic village of Portmeirion, musician Rhys Mwyn sets out to discover the ‘real’ Gwynedd in the latest addition to the Seren Real Series.

This county-wide addition to the Real series explores mainland North West Wales, an area rich in history from pre-Roman times to the industrial (slate quarrying) and post-industrial (tourism and heritage). Gwynedd is a fascinating mix of English and Welsh speaking cultures which the author is very well placed to explore.

As a native of the area, Mwyn recognises the historically unusual in Gwynedd, and has a lightness of touch in exploring its significance. His book is a richly detailed and quirky exploration of a place where history takes in druids, princely medieval power, the Romantic Tour, grinding industrialisation, absentee landlords, religious persecution, the Victorian seaside, and grinding contemporary tourism.

Illustrated by offbeat photographs, and drawing on Mwyn’s Welsh language culture, Real Gwynedd is an entertaining and informative exploration of this often mysterious, mountainous county.

Mwyn’s tour of Gwynedd includes life around the North Wales slate quarries, what it’s like to live there, the Quakers at Dolgellau, alternative technology at Corris, the seaside at Barmouth and Aberdyfi, the iconic reservoir at Treweryn, bronze age beer, the long finger of the Ll?n peninsula, Snowdonia, Ynys Enlli and its 20,000 saints, and The Prisoner at Portmeirion.

Real Gwynedd by Rhys Mwyn (published by Seren) is out now.