Yell, Sam, If You Still Can by Maylis Besserie shows us Samuel Beckett at the end of his life in ...
A new and original work from "e;one of the most accomplished and original writers of our time...
'I have to say the book is an unalloyed pleasure to hold and to glance through -- a sensual ...
Caravaggio was the greatest artist since Titian, a favourite of Popes and wealthy bankers. But at...
Ben Contini, a disenchanted painter of considerable talent, has just buried his mother. Rifling t...
Daniel Corkery's The Hidden Ireland: A Study of Gaelic Munster in the Eighteenth Century, has had...
In The Land of Nod is the fourth and final volume of Hubert Butler's essays and crowns a remarkab...
The people who talk about their lives in this book represent a creative, dissident Ireland. They ...
The only child of a middle-class Methodist couple in suburban Clontarf, Niall Rudd attended High ...
Agnes Bernelle, one of Ireland's best-loved stage performers, was born Agnes Bernauer in Berlin i...
One hundred and forty-four poems were selected by the editor from the two hundred or so displayed...
Lorcan Roche is a fresh and vivid voice in new Irish fiction. I love the energy of his writing an...