Posted: July 28, 2013 in Uncategorized

Margaret E. Ward

Margaret is an entrepreneur, financial journalist and roadcaster. In 2005, she set up Clear Ink, now a global brand tone-of-voice consultancy. Clear Ink’s client list includes Accenture, Danske Bank, Kellogg’s, GE Money and many other blue-chip companies.

Mags has been a business presenter on Newstalk and regular contributor to RTÉ, TV3, BBC and National Public Radio (USA). Over 25 years as a print journalist, she mainly worked for The Irish Times as a business and personal finance columnist and investigative reporter, and as The Sunday Times’ first Money editor in Ireland.

She was awarded the Law Society of Ireland’s Justice Media Award for social and campaigning journalism for an 18-month investigative report and a Science and Technology Journalism award, both while working for The Irish Times.

Mags is also a popular MC and host at events in Ireland and abroad (see Personallyspeaking.ie). She is founder of Women on Air, a writing skills trainer, a voiceover artist, a financial journalism lecturer, and the author of three books and thousands of articles.

Along with her passion for business and clear communication, Mags also loves wild swimming, surfing, travel, dark chocolate and skiing. In 2013 she is taking up Nordic skating. Her daughter, son and husband are very embarrassed by Mags’ latest adrenalin sport and refuse to be seen with her on Dollymount strand.

Margaret E. Ward is or was a regular slot holder on Tubridy 2fm

Posted: July 28, 2013 in Uncategorized

Michael Graham
Michael Graham has to be the only person on Earth to open for Bill Maher, Chris Rock and Sarah Palin. Radio talk host Michael Graham has spent nearly his entire life in front of a mic. He started in college as a tand-up comic, spending six years on the national circuit performing with stars like Jerry Seinfeld, Jeff Foxworthy and the aforementioned Chris Rock.

Then Michael’s career took an unexpected turn toward politics, working as a GOP political consultant on campaigns from Chicago to the Carolinas. As a result, he’s became a frequent guest on FOX/CNN/MSNBC, including several appearances on Bill Maher’s “Politically Incorrect” and “Real Time” TV shows.

Today, Michael hosts “The Natural Truth” from noon-3pm weekdays on the New England Talk Network.

The author of four books, including the first major publisher book on the Tea Party movement–”THAT’S NO ANGRY MOB, THAT’S MY MOM!” (Regnery, 2010)–Michael is also a columnist for the Boston Herald.

As a former stand-up comedian who worked as a political consultant, Michael receives many requests as a public speaker. He’s addressed groups as diverse as the Cato Institute, the Massachusetts Association of Insurance Agents, the Washington State Bankers Association, the Texas A&M College Republicans and–in an odd twist of fate–a debate with Cuba’s ambassador to Ireland at Trinity College in Dublin.

One of the earliest Tea Party organizers, Michael also introduced Sarah Palin at a rally of 10,000 people on Boston Common in 2010.

 In Ireland he is known for this

Posted: July 28, 2013 in Uncategorized

Larry Donnelly


Larry Donnelly is a Boston native who holds both American and Irish passports and serves as Legal Counsel to Democrats Abroad Ireland. He is Lecturer & Director of Clinical Legal Education in the School of Law at the National University of Ireland, Galway. He is an attorney with substantial experience of practice before the state and federal bars of Massachusetts.

From a Boston Irish political family, Larry was active in politics and government in Massachusetts and now contributes regularly to various media outlets on politics and current affairs in the United States and in Ireland.

For the past two years, Larry was on leave of absence from NUI Galway and worked as Manager of the Public Interest Law Alliance, a Dublin-based project of the Free Legal Advice Centres Ltd., which seeks to expand the use of law in the public interest and for the benefit of marginalised and disadvantaged people in Ireland.

He is a graduate of the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, MA and of Suffolk University Law School in Boston.

Larry Donnelly is Lecturer & Director of Clinical Legal Education in the School of Law at the NUI Galway. He lectures in Legal Skills NUI Galway

Posted: July 24, 2013 in Uncategorized

in light of President Higgins accounced his convening a council of state due to passed abortion bill

Here is a rundown of said council

Ex-officio: executive Taoiseach (Prime Minister) Enda Kenny
Tánaiste (Deputy Prime Minister) Eamon Gilmore
Ex-officio: legislature Ceann Comhairle (Chairman of Dáil Éireann) Seán Barrett
Cathaoirleach (Chairman of Seanad Éireann) Paddy Burke
Ex-officio: judiciary Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Susan Denham
President of the High Court Nicholas Kearns
Ex-officio Attorney General Máire Whelan
Former officeholders President Mary Robinson, Mary McAleese
Taoiseach Liam Cosgrave, Albert Reynolds, John Bruton, Bertie Ahern, Brian Cowen
Chief Justice John L. Murray, Thomas Finlay, Ronan Keane
President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State None (  The office of President of the Executive Council was superseded in 1937 by that of Taoiseach; both former Presidents are dead. The 1996 Constitution Review Group proposed removing, as obsolete, mention of the office in relation to the Council of State)
President’s nominees (List of former nominees) Michael Farrell, Deirdre Heenan, Catherine McGuinness, Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh, Ruairí McKiernan, Sally Mulready, Gerard Quinn

Council of State Ireland 2012

See below for a short biography of each of the  President’s nominees

Michael Farrell

Michael Farrell is the senior solicitor with Free Legal Advice Centres. He was involved in the Civil Rights movement in Northern Ireland and is a former co-chairperson of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties.

Michael was a member of the Irish Human Rights Commission from 2001 until last year and is currently the Irish member of the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance. He is also a member of the Human Rights Committee of the Law Society.

Professor Deirdre Heenan

Deirdre Heenan is Provost and Dean of Academic Development for the University of Ulster’s Magee Campus, where she a member of the Senior Management Team. She was appointed to a Lectureship in Policy Studies at the University of Ulster in 1995 and became a Professor in 2007.

Professor Heenan is a co-founder and former co-director of the Northern Ireland Life and Times Survey which has become a key statistical resource for schools, academics and policy makers. Her particular areas of expertise are devolution, education and social care.

In 2008-9 Deirdre spent nine-months working as a policy adviser in the Office of the First and Deputy First Minister. Last year she was appointed by Health Minister, Edwin Poots, to join the five strong panel of advisers to assist with the Review of Health and Social Care Services in Northern Ireland.

Judge Catherine McGuinness

Judge Catherine McGuinness was called to the Bar in 1977 and to the Inner Bar in 1989. She was a member of Seanad Éireann from 1979-82 and was a previous member of the Council of State from 1988-90.

She served as a Judge of the Circuit Court from 1994-1996, of the High Court from 1996-2000 and of the Supreme Court from 2000-2006. From 2005-2011, she was President of the Law Reform Commission. She is currently the Adjunct Professor of Law at the National University of Ireland, Galway.

Professor Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh

Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh is Professor Emeritus in History and former Dean of Arts and Vice-President of the National University of Ireland, Galway. A former member of the Senate of the NUI and of the Irish-US Fulbright Commission, and a former Cathaoirleach of Údarás na Gaeltachta, Professor Ó Tuathaigh has published widely – in Irish and English – on many aspects of modern Irish history.

Ruairí McKiernan

Ruairí McKiernan is a community activist and social entrepreneur. He is the founder of the national youth organisation SpunOut.ie. He is also a founder and organiser of the Possibilities 2011 Social Summit. Ruairí is a business graduate and is a recipient of numerous awards including a Social Entrepreneurs Ireland Award, a Net Visionary Award, and a Junior Chambers International Award. After 8 years as CEO of SpunOut.ie, he recently stepped down to develop new social innovations.

Sally Mulready

Sally Mulready has made a huge contribution to the Irish emigrant community in Britain over many decades. She was born in Dublin and moved to Hackney, London with her mother in the 1970s.

Sally is a local Labour councillor in the London Borough of Hackney since 1997. In her former capacity as the Secretary of the Federation of Irish Societies, Sally was involved in securing the Irish Government’s agreement for the creation and funding of five Survivor Outreach Services in Britain. She is also a founder member of the Irish Women’s Survivors Network and Director of the Irish Elderly Advice Network.

Sally was prominently involved in the campaign to free the Birmingham Six and is currently active in the Magadelene Laundries issue.

Professor Gerard Quinn

Professor Gerard Quinn is the Director of the Centre for Disability Law and Policy at the NUI Galway School of Law. The Centre is part of a new Lifecourse Policy Research Institute at the University which researches policy innovation covering age, child and family as well as disability. He is a graduate of UCG (BA, LL.B.), was called to the Irish Bar in 1983 and holds a masters (LL.M.) and doctorate in law (S.J.D.) from Harvard Law School. His specialization is international and comparative disability law and policy.

Professor Quinn led the delegation of Rehabilitation International (RI) at the UN Working Group that elaborated the new UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. He has worked in the European Commission and held a number of posts such as Director of Research at the Law Reform Commission and First Vice President of the European Committee of Social Rights (Council of Europe). He is a former member of the Irish Human Rights Commission.

He voluntarily participates on a number of international boards dealing with disability law and policy issues.

Out of  all of his  nomineees Michael Farrell,Judge Catherine McGuinness, and Professor Gerard Quinn will be of  use to him.Professor Emeritus Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh will probably be able to provide a historical prospective.Current members  Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Susan Denham Attorney General Máire Whelan Chief Justices  John L. Murray, Thomas Finlay, Ronan Keane as well as Nicholas Kearns ,President of the High Court of Ireland and Mary Robinson and  Mary McAleese, who were both solicitors before they entered Áras an Uachtaráin will be of to Micheal D

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Posted: July 9, 2013 in Uncategorized

http://randomandunheardof.wordpress.com/the-wretched-stories-collection-full-length/

Text of the inroductory address delivered by Profesor Tony Roche on 15 June 2013, on the occasion of the presentation of the Ulysses Medal on Sinead Cusack

Deputy-President, Honoured Guests, Ladies and Gentleman.

Sinead Cusack is the eldest daughter of two renowned Irish theatre actors, Cyril and Maureen. After acting at the Abbey Theatre in the 1960s as one of the brightest of a rising generation of Irish actors, she went to England in the 1970s and debuted with the Royal Shakespeare Company at Stratford-on-Avon. Sinead Cusack says that initially she was intimidated by the greatness of Shakespeare, thinking she should just stand stock still and deliver the lines. But she persevered and learned to make the lines her own by concentrating on Shakespeare’s profound understanding of human nature rather than on his intimidating greatness. Since then, she has played a great many of the dominant, independent but embattled heroines of those wise Shakespearean comedies, receiving  a Tony Award nomination in New York for her performance as Beatrice in Much AdoAbout Nothing. But she has gone further in her characteristically intrepid Shakespearean journey, tackling the most substantial of the female roles in the tragedies, Lady Macbeth, and Cleopatra in Antony and Cleopatra, one of her greatest achievements. Most recently, she has played Paulina in that great late Shakespearean romance, The Winter’s Tale, directed by Sam Mendes in the Bridge Project that was shared between the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York and the Old Vic in London.

Sinead Cusack has not neglected the Irish side of her theatrical lineage and instead has kept a consistent and core strand of Irish work running through her career.  In the 1970s, she was the best Pegeen Mike I have ever seen, in a TV production of Synge’s The Playboy of the Western World with John Hurt as Christy Mahon. Fiery, spirited, beautiful, independent, she brought a fine contemporary edge to the part. Two years ago, in an important first production between the two National Theatres of these islands, she played one of the most iconic roles in the Irish theatrical canon, Juno in Sean O’Casey’s Juno and the Paycock. Again, she made sure that the play was not just discussed for the male double act of Captain Boyle and Joxer Daley but for the interplay between her character and her husband, played by Ciaran Hinds. We were more aware than usual that this was a woman who was slaving in manual labour to put sausages in the pan for a disabled son, a striking daughter and a shiftless, chronically work-shy and alcoholic husband. Before our eyes, this ordinary woman grew in tragic depth until she commanded the increasingly bare stage with her courage and fortitude.

Sinead Cusack has made a no less major and garlanded contribution to the work of contemporary writers. In 2006, she pulled off an utterly convincing double role of a younger and older woman in Tom Stoppard’s Rock and Roll for which she received a Tony nomination for Featured Actress and a Drama Desk Award nomination for Best Actress. But it is her electrifying performances in plays by Brian Friel, Frank McGuinness, Sebastian Barry and Conor McPherson that we should particularly celebrate today. The most difficult role of her career, she says, was Mai O’Hara in Sebastian Barry’s Our Lady of Sligo in 1998. The play is primarily centred on an old Irish woman, lying in bed, dying of cancer; there are occasionally other characters and flashbacks but in the main it is a series of long, demanding monologues. The degree of her success in bringing this neglected old woman to unforgettable life   can be measured not only by the audiences worldwide who flocked to see the play but by the prestigious theatre awards it garnered: an Olivier nomination and the Evening Standard award and the Critics Circle Theatre Award for Best Actress. Sinead Cusack has reminded us forcefully that Brian Friel was writing major roles for women before Dancing at Lughnasa in her performances as Alice in Aristocrats and Grace in Faith Healer. I cannot imagine a better Grace: beautiful, bearing the loss of her child by a husband who describes her as ‘barren’, exercising all the forensic skill of her legal training the better to understand but not cure her passionate attachment to the faith healer. Her recent performance in Conor McPherson’s stage version of The Birds at the Gate brought a strong female role to the fore as the playwright moved into new and exciting territory. And there is Frank McGuinness, with whom she has collaborated memorably over the years. He wrote the version of Chekhov’s Three Sisters in which she starred with her father and her own two sisters, Sorcha and Niamh, at the Gate in 1990. McGuinness has also written screen roles for her, most recently a savage, tender, searing two-hander for Sky Arts, Crocodile. In it, Sinead Cusack plays a white lawyer approaching an imprisoned black woman she has been hired to defend. The white woman says she has gone to London to study law, from another country (it is implied from Ireland). In the imperial centre she has listened and she has learned, but she has retained her own personality, her own independence and her own imagination.

Frank McGuinness scripted these lines and the part with Sinead Cusack in mind, and they describe what she herself has achieved. She has gone from Ireland to an extraordinary career worldwide on stage and screen – rising in particular to the challenges of the poetic theatre of Shakespeare and Chekhov – but she has brought all of this home not only with frequent appearances on the Irish stage and in Irish film but with her award-winning and definitive work in the very greatest of our native playwrights.

Praehonorabilis Pro-Praeses, totaque Universitas,

Praesento vobis hanc meam filiam, quam scio tam moribus quam doctrina habilem et idoneam esse quae admittatur, honoris causa, ad gradum Doctoratus in Litteris; idque tibi fide mea testor ac spondeo, totique Academiae.

Text of the inroductory address delivered by Dr Eamonn Jordan on 15 June 2013, on the occasion of the presentation of the Ulysses Medal on Tom Murphy

Deputy-President, Honoured Guests, Ladies and Gentleman.

Ireland has produced wonderful artists, performers, film makers, musicians, poets, writers, and, probably most successfully, a significant number of playwrights of world renown. Without doubt, and over a fifty year period, Tom Murphy has produced a body of work that matches the very best of those writing in the English language since the turn of the twentieth century.

Tom Murphy has had an extraordinary career as an award winning playwright, as a novelist, as a theatre director, but also as a screenwriter for RTE, Thames Television, and the BBC. He is a member of Aosdána, a patron of the Irish Theatre Institute and he holds honorary degrees from Trinity College, Dublin and NUI Galway.

His playwriting career started in 1959 with On the Outside, a play co-written with Noel O’Donoghue. The ground breaking A Whistle in the Dark, which premiered in 1961 at the Theatre Royal in London, is an exceptional play that has not been in any way diminished by time. In that decade, other landmark achievements followed with Famine (1968) and A Crucial Week in the Life of a Grocer’s Assistant (1969).

Set during Ireland’s Great Famine period, Murphy’s playFamine captures not only the horrors of starvation and the near collapse of hope during that era, but also the conflicts of the emerging nation of his own time, which had inherited in part a famine consciousness. A Crucial Week portrays the terrors of emigration, the lot of the disenfranchised, the consequences of subsistence living, and it makes visible the oppressions and repressions that Ireland’s society circulated at that time.

The 1970s saw a number of important pieces of work, includingThe Morning after Optimism (1971) and The Sanctuary Lamp(1975).  The next decade brought three extraordinary dramas,The Gigli Concert (1983), for the Abbey Theatre, which was directed by Patrick Mason, and for Druid Theatre Company,Conversations on a Homecoming (1983) and Bailegangaire(1985), both of which were directed by Garry Hynes. The Gigli Concert is notable for its extraordinary awareness of the dialectics between silence and musicality, light and shadow, despair and a magical, transformative theatricality, andConversations for its wonderful reflections on friendship, the potentials and failures of collective aspirations, and, again, how emigration brings its own overwhelming conflicts.

Then, there is the most extraordinary of plays, Bailegangaire, which encapsulates how, through storytelling, a family comes to terms with and is mobilised by obsessions, loss and grief. By embracing and unravelling, in Tom Murphy’s term, the ‘blood knot’ of family bonds, trauma may be transformed when prompted by admission and by a redeeming laughter.

The most recent phase in Tom Murphy’s career is his on-going commitment to adaptations and new writing; these includeThe Drunkard (2003), The Cherry Orchard (2004), and The Last Days of a Reluctant Tyrant (2009) and original workssuch as The Wake (1997), The House (2000) and The Alice Trilogy (2005).

Of course, theatre is a collaborative art form. In the Abbey Theatre, after an initial early career rejection, Murphy has found a theatrical partner in tune with his vision. The Abbey Theatre has premiered many of his plays and adaptations, under the stewardships of various Artistic Directors, including Hugh Hunt, Joe Dowling, Lelia Doolan, Tomás Mac Anna, Alan Simpson, Garry Hynes, Vincent Dowling, Patrick Mason, Ben Barnes and Fiach MacConghail, to name but a few. The Abbey Theatre’s Murphy retrospective in 2001 is but one brilliant example of that relationship, and this season included a production of Bailegangaire, starring Pauline Flanagan, Derbhle Crotty and Jane Brennan, with Tom Murphy directing his own play.

Last year’s Druid/Murphy season, toured both nationally and internationally with three plays: FamineA Whistle in the Darkand Conversations on a Homecoming. This award winning project played to great acclaim in Galway, Dublin, London and New York and two of these three plays are currently on tour. Garry Hynes has called Tom Murphy a ‘house playwright’, and both the Abbey and Druid Theatres have been so fortunate to have a unique collaborator in Tom Murphy.  And, in both theatres, Murphy has found brilliantly collegial and creative allies, namely an array of directors, designers and actors that have collectively shaped the performances of his work.

Thanks to these theatrical partnerships, audiences have been given privileged access to plays that are dramaturgically complex, that are richly polyvocal, and that blend multiple spaces and simultaneous time frames. There is also Murphy’s often noted love of music, and the inclusion of music is evident right across his body of work.

Tom Murphy’s work inspired not only others of his own generation but also those that followed; playwrights such as Frank McGuinness, Marina Carr, Billy Roche, Enda Walsh and Conor McPherson have acknowledged their substantial indebtedness. In public interviews for print, radio and television and in interviews with graduate researchers and scholars, Tom Murphy has been exceptionally generous and forthright.  Also, three generations of scholars have been inspired to engage with his work, producing Phd theses, books, special journal issues and edited collections dedicated to Tom’s work. The richness and complexity of this body of critical commentary is testament to the regard in which Tom Murphy is held at home and abroad.

Many of the questions that social scientists, political and gender theorists, historians and philosophers have asked are evident in Murphy’s writings; the issues of morality, inequality and justice that all great art complicates are consistently raised by Murphy’s work; and it is also apparent that Murphy’s plays have dramatised many of the mental conundrums and conflictual impulses that cognitive psychology recognises and neuroscience now demonstrates.

Tom Murphy’s great skill is to pare things right down to their essential sounds and gestures, their essential instincts and feelings, their essential conflicts and harmonies. The work is driven by a fundamental grasp of the importance of theatrical vitality and the reach of imagination, thus freeing a performative expressivity that presses towards assertions of resistance, defiance, hope and transformation. It must be said that few individual writing careers survive five decades, and fewer again can sustain a hunger and passion for their art form. Because of Tom’s remarkable creativity, because of his unusual bravery and uncanny virtuosity, and because of his immense dedication to and belief in the magic of the art of theatre, Tom Murphy’s work has not only contributed substantially to the world of  theatre, but he has addressed, articulated, and defined the consciousness of his nation. 

Praehonorabilis Pro-Praeses, totaque Universitas,

Praesento vobis hunc meum filium, quem scio tam moribus quam doctrina habilem et idoneum esse qui recipiatur insigne ulixis; idque tibi fide mea testor ac spondeo, totique Academiae.

COLM WILKINSON In Concert

Posted: June 4, 2013 in Uncategorized

COLM WILKINSON In Concert

Thursday 13th & Friday 14th June, 8pm ( University Concert Hall, Limerick)

Bring Him Home…

One of Broadway’s most distinctive voices, Ireland’s Colm Wilkinson is best known as the original Jean Valjean and the Phantom, roles he created and embodied in London, Toronto and New York productions of Les Misérables and Phantom of the Opera.

He played Jean Valjean in the 10th Anniversary Concert at the Royal Albert Hall (1995) and has gained many new fans since his guest appearances on both the 25th Anniversary Concerts of Les Misérable at the O2 London (2010) and Phantom of the Opera at the Royal Albert Hall (2011).

Colm plays the Bishop of Digne in the new Les Misérables movie alongside Hugh Jackman, Anne Hathaway and Russell Crowe.

“I was delighted to be asked to play the role in the movie version of the greatest musical ever written… Twenty eight years ago as the original Jean Valjean I started an extraordinary journey with the Bishop of Digne setting me on the long road of reincarnation and salvation. It seems to me as I now take on the role of the Bishop that the journey has ended and I have come full circle”. Colm Wilkinson

Colm Wilkinson in Concert is an evening of music and stories. Theatre favourites such as ‘Music of the Night’, ‘Some Enchanted Evening’ and his signature song ‘Bring Him Home’ anchor the show which also includes definitive Irish classics such as ‘Danny Boy’ and ‘Whiskey in the Jar’. Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah’ and The Animals ‘House of the Rising Sun’ add another dimension to a programme rich in musical theatre and showcasing the complete depth, range and variety of Wilkinson’s talent.

Starring:
Colm Wilkinson & his band – Siobhán Pettit & Áine Whelan, guest vocalists
Early booking for these concerts is advisable

http://www.colmwilkinson.com

Tickets: €45 / Conc. €40
Balcony €35

***

other Irish dates

UNE
6 june 8 pm Broadway And Beyond
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!! CLICK HERE!!
or call 021 4270022 to purchase tickets (Cork Opera House)
Cork, Ireland

7  june 8 pm Broadway And Beyond
Cork Opera House)
Cork, Ireland

10th  june 8pm Broadway And Beyond
(Bord Gáis Energy Theatre)
Dublin, Ireland

13 8 pm Broadway And Beyond
(University Concert Hall)
Limerick, Ireland

14 th june 8 pm Broadway And Beyond
(University Concert Hall)
Limerick, Ireland

17th june 8 pm Broadway And Beyond
(Bord Gáis Energy Theatre)
Dublin, Ireland

TONIGHT! (26 April 2013)  half eght – til half ten

Venue: Town Hall Theatre

Join Cuirt for a very special evening when Irish fiction heroine Edna O’Brien will speak to broadcaster Vincent Woods about her recent memoir Country Girl.

Born in Ireland in 1930 and driven into exile after the publication of her controversial first novel, The Country Girls, Edna O’Brien has created a body of work which bears comparison with the very best writers of the twentieth century.

In Country Girl we come face to face with literary life of high drama and contemplation. Along the way there are encounters with Hollywood giants, pop stars and literary titans – all of whom lend this life, so gorgeously, sometimes painfully remembered here, a terrible poignancy. In prose which sparkles with the effortless gifts of a master in her ninth decade, Edna O’Brien has recast her life with the imaginative insight of a poet. It is a book of unfathomable depths and honesty.

‘Edna O’Brien has made of her memories something of both precision and depth, a book that, letting us see her as she was, jumps with an all-consuming curiosity from one lucidly narrated event to another, the scenes of disenchantment and bewilderment mingling with an assortment of surprises, traps, and ventures that are often, but not always, disastrous shocks. Only Colette is her equal as a student of the ardors of an independent woman who is also on her own as a writer.’
-Philip Roth

‘What a banquet indeed. A book of magics, truths, stories, and quiet immensity. No one else could have written it, and no one else could have lived it. The book is a poetic testament to what Scott Fitzgerald called our ‘capacity for wonder’.
-Andrew O’Hagan

Since her debut novel The Country Girls Edna O’Brien has written over twenty works of fiction along with biographies of James Joyce and Lord Byron.

She is the recipient of many awards including the Irish Pen Lifetime Achievement Award, the American National Art’s Gold Medal and the Ulysses Medal. Born and raised in the west of Ireland she has lived in London for many years.

Rob Newman, The Trade Secret 

As well as his comedy pairing with David Baddiel, Rob Newman is the author of four novels. His latest, The Trade Secret , is set in Elizabethan London; Saturday , Róisín Dubh (upstairs), 4pm til 6pm

the Guardian has dubbed it “bootleg Chomsky”.