Swansea Sound by Geoffrey Clarke
This novel is a work of âfactionâ, that means it is a combination of fact and fiction. Any similarity to incidents, events, famous personalities, or places in this book is either intentional, or otherwise haphazardly the product of the authorâs imagination, so to speak. Resemblances to actual persons either dead or alive are purely intentional, but the protagonist Watkin Davies, Mervyn Jenkins, Watkinâs wife Diane, Cliff and others are imaginary, but probably induced autobiographically in the authorâs mind by a process of the assimilation of ideas. Available on Am azon All rights reserved. No portion of this work may be stored in a retrieval system, or reproduced in any way or by means, electrical, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without the permission of the author. The writer asserts his right as the author of this work. The author recognises his sources as Ryan and Ronnie Williams, Max Boyce, Frankie Howard, Tony Hancock, Syd James, Spike Milligan, Eric Sykes and Hattie Jacques, Harry Secombe, TT (Terry) Thomas, Jimmy Edwards, Tommy Cooper, the fastest milkman in the West, Benny Hill, Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett, and that inimitable joke collector of all time â Bob Monkhouse. Although too risquĂ© for the period, I have included some material from Les Dawson, particularly about Watkin Daviesâs mother in law. Quite out of time, I have been influenced, too, by Rhod Gilbert, the contemporary Welsh comedian and broadcaster. Â