Monday, 30 June 2008

Tattoo - Tatú - Review & Interview




Language enthusiast Aidan Walsh, over at the Faoiseamh Blog, reviewed Tattoo:Tatú here.

He subsequently interviewed me about the book and the writing process and that interviews appears today here.

Big thanks to Aidan for his interest. Be sure to read his other posts on what it's like to live in Holland, with a Polish wife, bringing up three kids trilingually. Fascinating stuff.

Friday, 27 June 2008

Edna O'Blog, Tokyo, Paris and Chapelizod




I had my first blogging dream last night. I dreamt that I was blogging under the name Edna O'Blog. (Now where did that come from, do you suppose?!) And I was going out with Nate Fisher (the older brother in the sublime TV series Six Feet Under). Not the actor, but Nate, the character. What was that dream all about?! (No spoilers please on Six Feet Under. I'm working my way through the box set and am only at the start of series two.)

I heard this week that Culture Ireland are giving me the money to go to Tokyo in November to read at the Tokyo Poetry Festival. Thank you very much, Culture Ireland.

Also in November I've been invited to do a workshop and reading at the Centre Culturel Irlandais in Paris. The Centre's Director, Sheila Pratschke, saw my Paris-set story in The Stinging Fly and invited me after reading it. My year of writing related travel just gets better and better!

I might as well stick all the news in here, so I am reading in Chapelizod, at their festival, with Kevin Barry, next Wednesday night, 2nd July at 7pm, inside the village gate into the Phoenix Park.

Wednesday, 25 June 2008

REPORT ON SHORT STORY CONFERENCE





I’ve had a few deadlines this week so this blog has been down the list of priorities. The conference in Cork was fantastic, as I knew it would be. There was an overwhelming amount of events but I will try to report on my highlights, at least.

One great thing about such a vast conference is discovering a new writer. And so it was that I ambled along to a set of papers on Canadian fiction to hear about Mavis Gallant (my new favourite Canadian writer) only to discover a further ‘new’ Canadian writer, Michael Trussler.
I enjoyed Michael’s paper so much I made sure to get to his reading and it was brilliant. His story ‘Angels’, from the collection Encounters, was funny, vibrant, off-the-wall and had that undercurrent of darkness that’s so important. (Lucian Freud’s ‘little piece of poison’.) His collection was for sale there, so I bought it, but it can also be purchased from NeWest Press.

A panel on 'The Irish Short Story Today' had William Wall, Mary Morrissy, Claire Keegan and Colm Tóibín in conversation. Each had something good and interesting to say.
Claire: ‘Fine stories are told with reluctance; they waste little.’
Bill Wall wondered why Ireland never had an avant garde literature at home, with writers who stayed in Ireland. Mary Morrissy reckoned it was because a lack of luxury (material wealth) does not promote an avant garde. Claire thought that there was, and is, no reward for experimentation in fiction but maybe that would change with poverty. ‘Having little is the territory of the short story,’ she said. (Roll on the recession! Oh wait, it’s already here apparently. Yippee! I, for one, am glad of it.)
Bill Wall said ‘Maybe we need a poetics of anger.’
Colm Tóibín was witty and engaging, as always; he recommended we all read a story by Daniel Corkery called 'Nightfall'. Which I shall read as soon as I can get hold of it.

Robert Olen Butler and Bharati Mukherjee did a reading at Triskel Arts Centre on the Friday night. Both were excellent. She read a story about an affair between a young Indian woman and an older man that had delicious surprises in it. I think it was from The Middle Man and other stories but I can’t remember the title of the story.
Robert read from Intercourse, his wonderfully inventive short shorts book, and we heard from everyone from Mary Magdalen to Hillary Clinton. He is a confident and inventive reader and the audience enjoyed his reading hugely. Well, I did for sure!

Another highlight was Edna O’Brien’s reading on Saturday evening. She looked elegant and serene and she spoke with calm force, quoting from Yeats and Byron to illustrate her thoughts. She talked abut the difficulty of being a woman artist and the importance of women supporting women (hear! hear!). She said she writes by hand and re-writes by hand and she also said: ‘When I put pen to paper, sorrow invades the pen.’ Having said that, her story about a naïve young girl at a party in County Clare, was blackly funny. I thought she was wonderful. Claire Keegan said to me afterwards, ‘I was proud of her.’ I was too.

There was an art exhibition run at Triskel Arts Centre, in conjunction with the conference, whereby graphic art students at the University of Central Arkansas chose one story by a participating writer, and made an image based on that story. One of my stories The Sea Saw was the only Irish one chosen (so proud!) and a student named Shelby Watkins did a gorgeously poignant and energetic picture based on it. Thanks Shelby!

You don’t need to hear about my reading or editors’ panel – let it suffice to say that both went off hitchless and I enjoyed doing them. The launch of Southword at the City Library was also fun. See Tania's blog for a report.

The conference, and all about it, was great. It renews my confidence in this life I’ve chosen and it makes me hopeful for my work and my life as writer. It makes me feel like there is somewhere that I fit in, that I belong, and that’s a great feeling. So thanks to Dr Maurice Lee, Dr Susan Lohafer and Ann Luttrell and their teams, for their indecent amount of hard work that pulled off such a wonderful event. Long live the short story.

Saturday, 14 June 2008

SHORT STORY CONFERENCE




An International Conference on the Short Story In English, subtitled 'The Lonely Voice' takes place at University College Cork, June 19th to the 22nd.

The programme is now available at:
10th International Conference on the Short Story In English

There will be lots of academic papers as well as readings from practitioners. Readers taking part include: Mary Morrissey, Colm Tóibín, Claire Keegan, Edna O'Brien, Manuel Munoz, Tobias Woolf, Kirpal Singh, Robert Olen Butler, Cristina Rivera-Garza and myself.

Wednesday, 11 June 2008

Southword 14 launch

News of the launch of Southword 14 from Munster Literature Centre's newsletter:

Thursday June 19th 6.30pm

City Library, Grand Parade, Cork

Everybody Welcome. Please come and bring your friends!

To mark the coming to Cork of the International Conference on the Short Story Southword is celebrating with a bumper fiction issue. Authors with contributing fiction include Desmond Hogan, Vanessa Gebbie(longlisted for the Frank O’Connor Award) Catalan author Francesc Seres (co-translated by William Wall) and Jyrki Vainonen (co-translated by Kevin Barry) who is the Finnish translator of Seamus Heaney and Paul Muldoon. It is a truly international issue with not only local boy Kenneth Hickey but writers from other parts of Ireland, the UK, the US, France and Israel.

Fiction editor Nuala Ní Chonchúir will be finishing up a reading in UCC as part of the conference before joining us for the launch. The city library is very kindly providing wine and soft drinks on the night.

Poets published in this issue include Martina Evans, Mary O’Malley, Bernard O’Donoghue, Peter Sirr, Gerard Smyth, Enda Wyley, Rosemary Canavan, Matthew Sweeney, Graham Allen, Mary O’Donnell and many others.

There is a report of a talk John Montague gave earlier this year at NUI Galway and reviews of new work by James Harpur, John Liddy, Trevor Joyce, Eamon Mathews and Billy Ramsell. The cover features a detail from new work by Patrick Graham.

THE SHORT REVIEW, JUNE ISSUE

I'm back from my hols in France, complete with obligatory flu. What is that all about? The lack of decent veggie food in France? The different air? Whaaaat???

Anyway, I have no energy to write here, so instead will direct you to The Short Review's latest excellent issue here.

Enjoy!!

Tuesday, 3 June 2008

Iniscealtra Afterword



There are not many festivals where the artists’ accommodation is a boat, but so it was at the Iniscealtra Festival in Mountshannon. Our boat was compact – like a caravan without the space. (Complete with caravan smell…) But it was lovely to be on the water, watching the greedy swans begging from cruiser to cruiser. It all would’ve been fab except for the rowdy neighbours (several boat-loads of them) who sang and caroused until 5am each night.

But, my workshop went off well, in the school on the first day and in one of the festival organiser’s beautiful homes on the Sunday. This house is amazing, perched on a hill, with a huge abundant garden – from which we ate salads for lunch – and a view over Lough Derg.

There was music, a fair and art exhibitions, and I did a poetry reading in the gallery space in The Snug on Saturday afternoon. See mini review from Colm Liddy here on The Stinging Fly’s Café forum.

All in all, a wonderful and vast festival, in a very welcoming town in County Clare. I recommend it for next year, people.