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Dolores Stewart imagines and writes in the two tongues of Ireland. In both languages, Stewart imbues the hallmarks of the European imagination with personal and contemporary pertinence. Her poetry exhibits a sensibility profoundly shaped by the Western canon. Beautifully precise, her poems wear their undoubted intelligence lightly.
Although Rainer Maria Rilke is better known for his work in German, he also wrote more than four hundred poems in French. This collection is a response to Rilke's influence and to his French oeuvre, in particular the book Migration des Forces.
A debut collection of poetry from the Donegal-based writer and linguist Eithne Ni Ghallchobhair that addresses Irish nature and a day in the life of a hare. This collection was shortlisted for the 2020 Irish Language Book of the Year Award.
Mary Hayden was a prominent and persistent Irish feminist whose influence ranged over many decades, a power-broker in the university world, and a consistent activist for the underprivileged. Although a nationalist for most of her career, in her hierarchy of values nationalism always took second place to the cause of equality for women.
Margaret Mac Curtain - feminist, educator, activist, Dominican nun - has, since the 1960s, been an influential and respected commentator on Irish society.
This bilingual, English/Irish language poetry collection addresses the human condition from the personal to the universal.
Leaving the Ladies is based on an actual event which took place on 11 December 1917 in the bathroom beside the Round Room in the Mansion House, Dublin. This was no chance meeting of a group of ladies in the lavatory; instead it was an organised and minuted meeting of Women Delegates to the All Ireland Conference.
This collection includes three plays by Celia de Freine: Anraith Neantoige, Coirin na dTonn, and Tearmann.
Steeped in classical myth and Anglo-saxon lore, using words as esoteric as gynandromorphic or glossarist, she twists Latin and Greek sources under a Hellenistic `lens shift on the coppery gods' of Belfast and Down - Medbh McGuckian
With bold imagery and an arresting precision of language, Cuddington's poems reward a reader's close attention with vivid moments that remain in the mind long after the poem is read. In matching formal experiment to the zeitgeist of our moment, Cuddington announces herself as a poet who speaks directly to our times.
In this, her third short story collection, Geraldine Mills extends her thematic range to excavate new and shifting landscapes. Not afraid to tackle taboos, Hellkite occupies a space all of its own, where gender expectations are realigned to explore woman's inhumanity to man.
In Geraldine Mitchell's new collection, poems call and respond across the pages, giving the reader a sense of exploration and discovery, of entering a world where reality is faced but consolation is offered.
Presents new short fiction by thirty of Ireland's best established and emerging writers. From small town streets in millennium Ireland to the frontline trenches of World War I, these stories are filled with menace, intrigue, and wit.
Featuring essays from 52 Irish authors including John Banville, Paul Murray, Sean O Reilly, Claire Kilroy and Sophia Hillan, The Danger and the Glory gives us a fantastic insight into how these great writers do what they do.
Farrelly's collection introduces us to an intriguing range of 21st century Irish characters. A young woman rents a room in the home of an eccentric photographer; a poet attends a party at his girlfriend's family home to find that the invite was made with nefarious intention; and a husband is outraged to discover that his wife is posing at a life drawing class.
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