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  1. One of the most exciting teachers of the mythic imagination, Martin Shaw is a mythologist and author of the award-winning, Branch from a Lightning Tree.

    • INTERVIEW

      More from Ted Hargrave on Substack, Into the Marvellous: The...

    • BOOKS

      Read excerpts from books by Martin Shaw, the author of the...

    • CONTACT

      Dr Martin Shaw is a writer, storyteller and mythologist....

    • Scatterlings

      Scatterlings is an old word that really means of everywhere...

  2. More from Ted Hargrave on Substack, Into the Marvellous: The Art of Oral Storytelling + Travelogue + Interview with Martin Shaw from his Canadian Tour. Get acquainted with Martin Shaw in an interview about how he got started, and what writings and teachings are in the works.

  3. Read excerpts from books by Martin Shaw, the author of the award winning A Branch From The Lightning Tree, Snow Tower, and more.

  4. The eye of the needle is everywhere, abiding patiently for you to quilt your life to the Otherworld. Books by Dr. Martin Shaw: The Branch from the Lightning Tree, Snowy Tower and Scatterlings: Getting Claimed in the Age of Amnesia.

  5. Dr Martin Shaw is an award winning writer, mythologist and oral storyteller. His book Bard Skull was described by The Sunday Times as “rich and transgressive…a singular vision”. Dr Shaw founded the Oral Tradition and Mythic Life programmes at Stanford University and his conversation and catalogue with Ai Weiwei is available with the ...

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Martin_ShawMartin Shaw - Wikipedia

    Martin Shaw (born 21 January 1945) is an English stage, television, and film actor. He came to national recognition in the role of Ray Doyle in ITV crime-action television drama series The Professionals (1977–1983).

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  8. Dr. Martin Shaw is a celebrated international storyteller and award-winning writer. Author of seventeen books, he founded the Oral Tradition and Mythic Life courses at Stanford University. The Irish Times call him “a Seanchai, an interloper from the medieval,” and Madeline Miller names him “a modern-day Bard.”

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