Showing posts with label Munster Literature Centre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Munster Literature Centre. Show all posts

Tuesday, 23 September 2014

CORK AFTERS - PHOTOS

I'm in recovery mode after Cork and the short story festival. My favourite festival of them all. I taught a four day novel course to an enthused group of nine writers; I read and took part in a panel; I heard Richard Ford say the short story was a lesser form (than the novel) - ouch!; I listened to writers read, discuss, argue and laugh into the early hours.

I met lovely Canadian writers (again!) - like my fellow reader Matt Rader and also Lynn Coady, who read brilliantly with the sublime Alison MacLeod. We ate, we drank, we pub-crawled, we talked. It was exhausting and exhilarating, as ever. Kudos and gratefulness to Pat Cotter, Jen Matthews and all at Munster Literature Centre and Triskel for making it so good and for welcoming us all in.

My photos are pretty uniformly rubbish - I didn't bring my camera, for some reason, so it was phone snaps all the way. So, if you are not pictured here, it's because the photo I took of you is terrible. Here are a small few pics of the festival and of spots around Cork itself:

Jaki McCarrick reading at the library
Paul McVeigh reading at Culture Night in Waterstone's
Shane Vaughan reading at Culture Night in Waterstone's
Valerie Sirr reading at the library
Declan Meade introducing Sara Baume, Davy Byrnes 2014 winner, & Danielle McLaughlin, runner-up
Tofu gorgeousness at Café Paradiso
Juno sending a postcard to her brothers
The butter churn obsession continues apace - this one at The Butter Museum
Retro butter packets at The Butter Museum
Juno at The Butter Museum
Kay O'Mahony's, Shandon
Every time I go to Cork, I think, This is really a great place to visit. My top tips for visitors to Cork: eat at the Quay Co-op, the Farmgate Restaurant in the English Market, and Café Paradiso, Visit the Butter Museum and Mutton Lane Inn. Go to the Crawford Gallery and Vibes 'n' Scribes Book Shop. Enjoy, enjoy. I'm already looking forward to next year's Cork Short Story Festival.

Tuesday, 2 July 2013

SOUTHWORD SUMMER 2013 - ONLINE NOW


The new issue of Southword is now online. The incomparable Ted Deppe is there with a poem called 'An Art Critic and the Colour Yellow' and also Nell Regan with a beautiful poem, 'Gifted'. There's a story full of smoky 1970s images from Switzerland-based Irish writer Pádraig Rooney called 'The Tin Tabernacle'.

There is poetry in Irish, an essay about a carjacking by Paula Cunningham and reviews of two recent books by Cork-born writers Dave Lordan (short stories) and Theo Dorgan's début novel Making Way.

I have a flash in there called 'The Road That Mills and Boon® Built' which is based on an anecdote told to me at Cúirt 2012 by a lovely young Irish woman who lives in London called Isolde Roche - thanks for the inspiration, girl.

Thursday, 4 October 2012

GREGORY O'DONOGHUE POETRY PRIZE 2012

This year's judge is that wonderful poet and raconteur Thomas McCarthy. Send him moving, sensuous stuff, send him political stuff (your best election poem!) - he excels at both. Just saying.

1st Prize is €1000, a trip to Cork for the Cork Spring Poetry Festival (which this year features over 25 poets from nine countries including Carolyn Forché, Gwyneth Lewis, Dennis O'Driscoll and Karen Solie) and publication in Southword. Go here for more.

Munster Lit's budget has been slashed by 10%, a significant amount. They have a donations button on their homepage but even by entering the Greg O'D you can help them out.

Saturday, 7 July 2012

SOUTHWORD 22 ONLINE

 
Munster Lit's journal Southword is now online with poems, stories and reviews, in English and Irish. My story 'When I Go Down, Go Down With Me' is there.

There's also  review of Jamie O'Connell's short story collection, the launch of which I reviewed yesterday. As well as poems from Afric McGlinchey and Brian Kirk, among others.


Issue 22 of Southword is here.

Friday, 18 November 2011

The Essentials of Fiction - A Seminar with Claire Keegan

Just in from The Munster Literature Centre:

 Claire Keegan
 
We are pleased to present a seminar on writing fiction with one of our young masters, Claire Keegan. In recent years Claire has been spending far less time teaching and more time concentrating on her own work. This opportunity to share in her knowledge is becoming increasingly rare.

 Claire Keegan is the author of Antarctica, Walk the Blue Fields and Foster; publications which have earned her the William Trevor Prize (judged by William Trevor), The Francis MacManus Award, The Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, The Edge Hill Prize and The Davy Byrnes Award (judged by Richard Ford)  among many others.

"a natural inheritor of the mantle of John McGahern and Alistair MacLeod, a writer already touched by greatness." --Declan Kiberd

"Every line seems to be a lesson in the perfect deployment of both style and emotion." --Hilary Mantel

The seminar is designed for anyone interested in writing a short story or a novel, or is already having difficulty with their fiction. It will examine how fiction works and how stories begin.
structure of narrative * writing dialogue *
tension in fiction
* point of view/perspective characters & language * conflict * character development
* shape/ structure of a paragraph *
reading recommendations * Q&A session

The Metropole Hotel
Saturday December 10th
10am - 1pm
Tickets €50 

Claire is waiving all fees and proposed this endeavour as a fund-raising event for the Munster Literature Centre which is a registered charity. All monies raised will be spent on the promotion of writers and writing.

To purchase tickets contact Jennifer at
Info@munsterlit.ie or phone 021-4312955.

Sunday, 9 October 2011

Gregory O'Donoghue Prize 2012

Patrick Cotter

The 2012 Gregory O'Donoghue Prize is now open for business, courtesy of those very diligent people at Munster Lit in Cork. The judge this year is Patrick Cotter, poet, translator, publisher and Director of the Munster Literature Centre.
Patrick's own poetry is witty, sexy and, frankly, brainy. That's not to say he will pick a poem like that as winner but I'm just saying. Potential entrants could do worse than read a couple of his collections to see what he writes. To tune in, as it were. His site is here.
1st Prize €1000, publication in Southword and a trip to Cork.
2nd Prize €500 and publication in Southword.
3rd Prize €250 and publication in Southword.
Ten runners-up to be published in Southword and receive €30 publication fee. Deadline Sunday 18th December 2011.
More here.

Sunday, 18 September 2011

FRANK O'CONNOR AWARD WINNER 2011 - Edna!

WRITER EDNA O'BRIEN PHOTOGRAPHED BY JOHN MINIHAN, LONDON 1971

The news just in from Cork is that Edna O'Brien has been announced as the winner of the 2011 Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award for her collection Saints and Sinners (I reviewed it here). An Irish winner at last, right?! Congratulations, Edna, I'm delighted for you!

She gave a stunning reading last night at the Cork Short Story Festival.

My commiserations to her fellow shortlistees, who were each worthy of the award. Wonderful writers all.

I am back in Galway, exhausted after a fantastic time at the festival. I ate too much, drank too much but I never can get enough of that short story love. It was brilliant. Pics and report to follow.

Monday, 25 July 2011

SOUTHWORD 20 NOW LIVE

Writer Adam Marek - pic by Andy Hay
Southword 20, the journal of the Munster Literature Centre, is now online. I have a poem in it here. There are also poems by Paula Meehan, Theo Dorgan and Sinéad Morrissey, to name a few. There are stories from Mary O'Donnell and Adam Marek, among others.

A new feature of the journal is that anyone who has contributed to Southword in the past, or has had previously had work reviewed in it, has a ‘Contributor's Index Page’. You can find this by clicking on your name in the 'Southword Contributors' drop-down menu at the top of the page. From there you should be able to access all of your work across multiple issues of Southword. Neat!

Monday, 18 July 2011

SEÁN Ó FAOLÁIN DEADLINE LOOMS

The Seán Ó Faoláin Short Story Competition is an annual short story competition dedicated to one of Ireland’s most accomplished story writers and theorists, sponsored by the Munster Literature Centre. The closing date for entries is the 31st July.

If the winner goes to Cork to collect their prize, the organisers say: "We will lavish them with hotel accommodation, meals, drinks and VIP access to the literary stars at the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Festival (14-18 September 2011)."

First Prize: €1,500 (*approx USD $2000/ GBP £1300), a week at writers' retreat Anam Cara, and publication in the literary journal Southword Journal Online.

Second Prize: €500 and publication in Southword.

Four other shortlisted entries will be selected for publication in Southword and receive a publication fee of €120.

*Currency exchange amounts via XE.com, calculated 11.04.11
 

For more details about how to enter, please visit here.

Saturday, 9 July 2011

FRANK O'CONNOR SHORTLIST 2011!

Author Edna O'Brien - shortlisted for the Frank O'Connor Award 2011

News just in from the Munster Literature Centre - the 2011 Frank O'Connor Award shortlist has been announced. Two Irish writers, Edna O'Brien (see my review of her collection here) and Colm Tóibín have made the list as well as former winner Yiyun Li.

Women writers dominate the  shortlist for what is the world's largest short story award, (€35,000). There are two young debutantes, Canadian Alexander MacLeod and American Suzanne Rivecca. American novelist Valerie Trueblood is shortlisted with her first short story collection. So the six shortlisted books are:

1)      Gold Boy, Emerald Girl by Yiyun Li (Beijing-born, American Resident)

2)      Light Lifting by Alexander MacLeod (Canadian debutante)

3)      Saints and Sinners by Edna O'Brien (Irish) 
4)      Death is Not an Option by Suzanne Rivecca (American Debutante) 

5)      The Empty Family by Colm Tóibín (Irish)
6)      Marry or Burn by Valerie Trueblood (American)

It is the first year two Irish authors have been shortlisted for this, the world's largest and most prestigious award for the Short Story. Established in 2005 the award is in the gift of the Munster Literature Centre and funded by Cork City Council. It is awarded for what is judged to be the best original short story collection published in English between July 1st 2010 and June 30th 2011.


The award will be presented at the culmination of the Cork International Short Story Festival on Sunday September 18th. 

Previous winners have included Haruki Murakami, Jhumpa Lahiri and Simon Van Booy. 

The 2011 jury consists of Alannah Hopkin, Irish novelist and short story writer; Chris Power, music and book critic for the Guardian, BBC and London Times; and Thomas McCarthy, Irish poet, novelist and librarian.

Wednesday, 22 December 2010

SOUTHWORD 19 ONLINE

Photo by John Minihan

Southword 19 is now online and the winners of the Seán Ó Faoláin Short Story Award, as chosen by Tania Hershman, can be read there. There are new poems from the brilliant Tess Gallagher, Vona Groarke and Billy Collins; Matthew Sweeney reviews Thomas Lynch; Jennifer Matthews reviews Dave Lordan; Gerry Murphy is also in review etc. etc.

John Minihan is the Frank O'Connor festival's official photographer each year and there are photos aplenty form this year's events in Southword. The pic above is of me and a terrified looking Juno, with Finbar, my husband. What a privilege to be photographed by John again. Get yourself to the festival next year - it's in my top two, vying for pole position with Cúirt.

Sunday, 3 October 2010

GREGORY O'DONOGHUE PRIZE NOW OPEN


Last year's winner, John F. Deane

Munster Literature Centre are holding the Greg O'Donoghue Prize again, last year won by John F. Deane. Copious detail below!

The current judge is Leanne O'Sullivan, who will read each and every entry herself; in many other competitions entries are screened and longlisted by preliminary readers, not so for the Gregory O’Donoghue International Poetry Prize.€1,000 first prize, €500 2nd prize.

Leanne O'Sullivan comes from the Beara Peninsula in West Cork and was educated at University College Cork. She has published two collections, both from Bloodaxe Books, Waiting for My Clothes (2004) and Cailleach: The Hag of Beara (2009). She has been anthologised in collections such as The New Irish Poets (ed. Selina Guinness) and Best Irish Poetry (ed. Matthew Sweeney).

Fees and Deadlines

There will be an entry fee of €5 per poem or €20 per batch of five. (Postal entries can be paid for in US Dollars or Pounds Sterling. No cash, please.) Closing date for entries is December 15th 2010.

A result will be reached by late January 2011, with a shortlist published on our website at that time. The winners will be contacted individually and announced publicly during the Cork Spring Literary Festival in February 2011. Due to the large volume of entries, the judge will not be able to notify the authors of non-winning poems or give individual feedback. Please refer to the submission guidelines below for details on how to enter.

Submission Guidelines--PLEASE READ CAREFULLY!

1. The competition is open to original, unpublished poems in the English language of 40 lines or less. The poem can be on any subject, in any style, by a writer of any nationality, living anywhere in the world. Unfortunately, translated work is not in the scope of this competition.

2. Entries should be typed. The entrant's name and contact details must be on a separate piece of paper. Manuscripts cannot be returned. Your name should not appear on the same page as the poem to ensure anonymity.

3. There will be an entry fee of €5 per poem or €20 per batch of five. For postal entries you may pay UK£5 or US$8 per poem, or UK£20 or US$32 per batch of five. You may submit as many entries as you wish. Withdrawn poems (for any reason) will not be eligible for refunds. Cheques and money orders must be made payable to THE MUNSTER LITERATURE CENTRE. VERY IMPORTANT: We DO NOT accept US Postal Orders as they cannot be redeemed outside of the United States. No entry form is necessary. N.b. American entrants: please date cheques by writing out the month as a word. For example: November 4 2010. If any information is crossed out or altered, our bank returns the cheque to us as unusable. In such cases we would have to request a new cheque from the entrant, delaying the processing of their work.

4. Closing date is 15th December 2010. Please note that the post office is very busy this close to Christmas and it is advisable to enter online after December 1st to ensure your poem arrives on time. Entries must be sent to The Gregory O'Donoghue International Poetry Competition, The Munster Literature Centre, Frank O'Connor House, 84 Douglas Street, Cork, Ireland (no postal/zip code).

5. A result will be reached by late January 2011, with a shortlist published on our website at that time. The winners will be announced at the Cork Spring Literary Festival in February 2011.

6. If you require acknowledgement of your entry, you must submit a self-addressed stamped postcard. SASEs for international entries should include money for IRISH stamps. Please do not include SASEs with American, British or other stamps foreign to Ireland. Instead you may add one dollar or pound to the total of your entry fee to cover the cost of postage.

7. The Judge's decision is final. Due to the large volume of entries anticipated, the judge will not be able to give feedback on an individual basis. We would kindly request that entrants refrain from emailing to check the status of their poems.

8. It would greatly assist us if you let us know how you heard of the competition (whether through mailshot, word of mouth, advertisements, newspaper, website, etc.) with your entry.

ADDITIONAL SUBMISSION GUIDELINES FOR EMAIL ENTRIES

Email entries should be submitted as follows:

1. Send your entry as a word document (files ending with ".doc"). Please note that we cannot open the most recent version of Word documents, which usually end in '.docx'. Please ensure you save the poem in a compatible format, usually labeled 'Word 97 - 2003 Document'.
2. Include the poem/poems and cover letter as separate documents in the same email.
3. Pay your entry fee through Paypal (see link on our webpage). Paypal accepts Mastercard and Visa and guarantees secure transactions.
4. In the body of the email, list your name, address, poem titles and Paypal receipt number.
5. Use the subject header "O'Donoghue Entry".
6. Email submissions to competitions(AT)munsterlit(DOT)ie

Munster Lit say: "We would kindly request that entrants refrain from emailing to check the status of their poems. Withdrawn poems will not be eligible for refunds." So, now you know, people ASK! See their site here.

Friday, 17 September 2010

FRANK O'CONNOR FESTIVAL - THE IMPATIENT BEFORES

Going to the Frank O'Connor Festival gets me giddy in a way no other literary festival gets me giddy. It's a festival that has been good to me, as well as always being stimulating and super enjoyable. And I just LOVE that it is purely about the short story. I feel fizzy today, restless and impatient, and can't wait to get in the car and shoot off to Cork (rather awkwardly via Dublin). We are no longer a two car family. (Yes, the stolen car saga continues - my insurance company managed to locate it in a scrapyard in Tipp today. Bravo! That only took 2 weeks. F@*#"%$!!!! Enough said...)

I'll have missed nearly 3 days of the Festival by the time I get there tonight but I am grateful for the bits of it I will get to take part in. Gone are the heady days when I spent the whole of the Festival in Cork, soaking it all up: the stories, the company, the city, the food. Which reminds me, Café Paradiso here I come tomorrow! How I love that restaurant! Anyway, I'm thrilled to be going to Cork and can't wait to meet my pal Tania Hershman there, and Jen, my editor at Salt, as well as all the Munster Lit crew. And I especially can't wait to hear some new (to me) short story writers.

How is it still only midday??!! I want to gooooooooooooooooooo...

Friday, 12 March 2010

ALL WOMAN JURY FOR THE 2010 FRANK O'CONNOR AWARD

It's an all-woman jury for this year's Cork City - Frank O'Connor Award. Interesting!!! My short fiction collection Nude is eligible. Wooooo.
 
From Munster Lit:
"The Frank O'Connor Short Story Festival culminates with the presentation of the Cork City-Frank O'Connor Short Story Award, which at €35,000 is the richest award for the Short Story form in the world. I think going into its sixth year we can safely say that it is now also the world's most prestigious Short Story Award which ensures worldwide fame for the festival and the participation of some of the biggest names in contemporary fiction. Currently we are receiving entries for the award which can be received by us up to the end of this month.
 
In April we will publish the 2010 longlist for the award as well as the names of this year's judges. We can confirm, as a teaser, that all the judges this year happen to be women. They were each selected by Patrick Cotter for their professional relationship to fiction and the arts.  Cotter says: "I didn't deliberately set out to select a jury of all women and maybe one of these days I'll end up with a jury who happen to be all men." In June a shortlist of four or six will be chosen and those writers will all be invited to read at the festival too."

Thursday, 17 December 2009

JOHN MINIHAN AND ME


WRITER EDNA O'BRIEN PHOTOGRAPHED BY JOHN MINIHAN, LONDON 1971

I'm having a me, me, me moment. I could moan and gnash and tell you all why...shall I? Hmmm. Let me put it this way, I'm fed up giving and getting nothing back. Why are certain creative people so selfish!? Grrr, gnash, seethe.

So, to continue with the me, me, me theme of this post, look here in Southword for pics that John Minihan (John effing Minihan!!!) took of me and my partner and Juno at the Frank O'Connor Festival. This man has photographed Beckett, Bacon, Diana the Princess of Wales, and one of my heroines, Edna O'Brien, as well as various other wonderful and famous people. I am thrilled!

John is the annual official photographer at the Frank O'Connor Festival (aren't the Munster Literature people clever?) and you can buy limited edition prints from his website of Beckett if you are flush or buy one of John's books of photographs An Unweaving of Rainbows - Images of Writers here at the Book Depository.

Monday, 7 December 2009

3 BOOKS FOR XMAS 2009

I can’t keep up with all the fabulous journals, chapbooks and books I get sent/buy/swap. I want to blog about all of them but I’d be here night and day if I did. But I would like to give a swift mention to three that really impressed me lately:



Best Irish Poetry in English 2010
, edited by Matthew Sweeney (Southword Editions)

This one is being launched this Wednesday night at 7.30pm in the Munster Literature Centre in Cork with mulled wine, candlelight and mince pies. Oh, how I wish I could be there. Matthew Sweeney is an excellent Irish poet with an eye for the quirky, the absurd and the moving. This is reflected in many of his choices in this handsome production which is an annual event from Southword Editions. He writes a cracking, honest editorial too.
Poets include Séamus Heaney, Leontia Flynn and Kerry Hardie. I even have a poem in there – so proud! Special price of €10 from the site with free P&P within Ireland.
Buy here.


Round the Clock – Christodoulos Makris (Wurm Press)

A poet from Cyprus based in Ireland, Christodoulos Makris writes witty, extraordinary work. This is a chapbook from Wurm Press, described in a review as ‘a controlled explosion of twelve poems that reveal inner prepossessions and fiery confrontations to self, and country. They are charged with desire and a powerful will...’
I was knocked out by the skill of this writer; he deserves to be taken up by one of our good/big poetry publishing houses. In the meantime you can buy this chapbook from his blog, yes but is it poetry?, or indeed exchange it for a book of your own if you are a writer.


Davy Byrnes Stories – as selected by Richard Ford (Stinging Fly Press)

This includes the five shortlisted and one winning story from the recent Davy Byrnes Short Story competition which was administered by The Stinging Fly. Claire Keegan was the eventual winner with her fine story ‘Foster’. It is vintage Claire: it's rural, and concerns a young girl and a background tragedy. It has beautiful detail and the sparse dialogue is pitch perfect.
All of the stories are good, of course - some I enjoyed more than others. Kathleen Murray’s ‘Storm Glass’ is beautifully layered and it plays with the notion of truth and memory and family secrets. It is gentle and gorgeously well written.
What is nice too is that each writer introduces their story with a short piece on its genesis. Fascinating.
Buy here for €10 which includes P&P.

Wednesday, 2 December 2009

SOUTHWORD 17 ONLINE NOW

So much to blog about, so little time...

Southword Journal Online, issue 17, is now up! Read new work by Martín Espada, Theo Dorgan, Billy Ramsell, Alexa Beattie (this year's Seán Ó Faoláin Competition winner, as chosen by Philip Ó Ceallaigh) and many others.

A quote, to whet, from wonder-poet Billy Ramsell's poem 'Half Time':

'Aphrodite sashayed from the kitchen with the tartan tea tray.
Hermes looked from the soiled dinner dishes

to the paisley wall paper to the telly and emitted a long sigh of boredom.
Hurling, like most team sports, isn't much fun when you know how it finishes.'

The Cork poets have it all going on, I always feel: they are witty, learned, NICE!!!

By the way, the advertised photos by John Minihan will follow next week. I'm looking forward to that.

And Jennifer Matthew's thoughtful review of Nude is there too.

Lovely Southword...!

Friday, 2 October 2009

Gregory O'Donoghue Poetry Competition

An exciting new international poetry competition, in memory of well loved Cork poet Greg O'Donoghue, has just been announced by the Munster Literature Centre. Do these people ever rest? Clearly not, lucky for us.

DETAILS:

The Munster Literature Centre is pleased to announce a new international poetry prize for single poem, named in honour of a late Irish poet long associated with the Centre. The Gregory O'Donoghue International Poetry Prize will have a first prize of €1,000 (on 1 October 2009 approx. US$1400 or UK£900) and publication in Southword Literary Journal. The winner will have the opportunity to travel to Cork, Ireland in February 2010 to receive their winnings and read their poem at the opening of the Cork Spring Literature Festival. The MLC will subvent travel costs for the winner up to €600 and provide hotel accommodation and meals for three days during the festival. There will be a second prize of €500, third prize of €250, and ten runners-up will each have their poems published in Southword and receive Southword's standard fee of €30.

Entry details here.

Friday, 4 September 2009

SEÁN Ó FAOLÁIN 2009 SHORTLIST

The 2009 shortlist and commendations for the Seán Ó Faoláin Short Story comp have been announced. Here are Philip ó Ceallaigh's choices as judge:

(alphabetical order)

"Snow" by Elaine Barnard, California, USA

"Cold Cut" by Alexa Beattie, CT, USA

"Harm" by Michael Copperman, Oregon, USA

"Southern Hospitality" Alyn Fenn, Co.Cork, Ireland

"My Friend Joe" by David Mohan, Co. Dublin, Ireland

"The Mason's Tale" by Alec Solomita, MA, USA

"Holding On" Sheena Wilkinson, Co. Down, N. Ireland



Commendations

(In order of entry)



“The Shaman Can’t Call the Spirit Home” Benjamin Arda Doty, Mn, USA

“Scattered Teeth” Tabitha Roemish, Seattle, USA

“The Statistician” Richard Scarsbrook,Toronto, Canada

“The Fallen Cone” Sasha Margolis, Ohio, USA

“Nel Mezzo del Camin” James Moynihan, Cork, Ireland

“The Sky at Night” Robert Keaton Mac Donald, California, USA

“Giving Up” Gerry McCullough, Northern Ireland

“The Girl in the Window” Brian Kirk, Dublin, Ireland

“Island Shaman” René J. Navarro, Pennsylvania, USA

“The Girl at the Fair” Howard Petote, North Carolina, USA

“ Italian Lesson” Grace French, Dublin, Ireland

“The Grind” Dónal Moloney, Waterford, Ireland

“Waiting for the Bullet” Madeleine D’Arcy, Cork, Ireland

“The Boys” Emily Firetog, Dublin, Ireland

“Dancers” Andrew Fox, Dublin, Ireland

“Losing Amanda” Andrew Rogers, North Carolina, USA

“Never, Ever bring this Up Again” Luke Woods, New York, USA

“A Smudge of Color” Chris Nicholson, New York, USA

“The Cost of Fuel” Kathryn Hively, New Jersey, USA

"Dilation" Beverly Parayno, California, USA

Thursday, 13 August 2009

PROGRAMME FOR FRANK O'CONNOR 2009

The programe for the 2009 Frank O'Connor Festival in Cork has been announced. See Munster Literature's site here.

I can only stay 3 days this year (sob) as I have to dash off on the Saturday for my Clifden Arts Week reading (Cork to Clifden by car with a, by then, 4 month old baby - urgh).

BUT! I will get to see Simon Van Booy read (I am reading his book for review at the moment and am totally lost in it); also Billy O'Callaghan and Petina Gappah.

And my book Nude is being launched there, in the City Library, on the Friday at 4pm - all welcome!