Saturday and the Irish Times

It is rather silly, I know. I wait for Saturday morning to arrive where I can sit with a nice strong cup of caffeine and a copy of the Saturday Irish Times. It really is an excellent paper. It beats any other paper, even the Sunday Times. Other people will probably disagree but those people probably like the Financial Times or the Daily Mail because of it’s magazine. That’s fine. Don’t say I didn’t tell you.

Especially though, it is incredibly ahead of the trends when it comes to art, culture and literature and is modest in the way it promotes good Irish writing. The weekend review section makes me a poor woman though? They always have some review of a short story collection or novel that I will want to buy. I take a snap of the review on my phone and that image will sit in my head for a while until the nice men in Hodges and Figges Bookshop take lots of money from me. Next book on my read list is Ron Rash and his short story collection “Burning Bright”. Apparently, I have to buy it. The people in the Irish Times told me to so it would be rude not to.

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Holiday reading

I have spent the last two weeks in the beautifully cool city of Santander, in the region of Cantrabia, Spain.  I still had a couple of new short story collections to read at home and was debating to bring them with me but then I thought of using my kindle instead.

I downloaded “Solace” by Belinda McKeon and “Selected stories” by William Trevor and”Broken harbour” by Tana French.
Some explanation is needed, I think! Solace is a novel I have been meaning to read for a while. I hate reading a book just because it’s popular or won some type of award and Solace seemed that type of book. No, I would wait until I felt like reading it. That time came after the West Cork Lit festival in Bantry. Belinda Mc Keon was reading and staying at the whole event in the same hotel we were in. I saw her at breakfast every morning and noted she looked using iPads and twitter and was fascinatingly to look at. Sounds, like I was a bit obsessed, I wasn’t. She just happened to be an early riser like us! So, her little face stuck in my mind and when I downloaded the sample first chapter from Solace, I liked and wanted more. I read Solace in barely two days! Belinda really gets Ireland but especially rural Ireland. I had never thought of the pull of the father and the guilt of the son as they leave rural life, farming and land behind them.  She also seems to write very descriptively about modern Dublin life and having a baby! Solace is a must read that reminds me of what a good short story is about:nothing but everything. The novel opens with a prologue which makes you carry on reading until the end. I’m giving nothing away!
The second novel I read in ultra quick time was Broken Harbour by Tana French. She is an Irish(well, we have claimed her as Irish!) crime writer whose first two novels scared the bejesus out of me! This one is as compelling though it seemed to go on a bit too much towards the end and didn’t scare me as much. Maybe, I’m becoming less nervy in older life! I enjoyed it, a very light read that those type of women might bring to the beach. Tana French is no Belinda Mc Keon thought I’m sure both women are happy with their own genre and style. Worth a read but not as good as her first two, though disturbing observations on the Celtic Tiger and what went could have gone wrong.
I am only half way through William Trevor’s Selected Stories. I’ve noticed that be seems to be a very formal, gentlemanly type of writer and his stories could be easily lengthened out into a novella. I’m enjoying him though and learning from him as the master of the short story. He was born in 1928 but he can do it all-old style, modern, funny, sexy…Jealous?
The holidays have been great for not only reading but for writing. Since, my time in Bantry, I have written 9 individual short stories, with two of them becoming the longest I have ever written. Now, the next step is to draft, redraft and then show to the writers group. We have a reading coming up at Penfest Carlow 2012 and hoping to get one into a good state for that!

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Carlow Penfest Literary Festival 2012

Carlow Penfest literary festival

Now in its second year, preparations are underway for Pen Fest 2012, the annual Carlow County Library literary festival.

The focus of this years festival is on emerging writers and will feature workshops and talks by experts in the literary field. A number of different genres will be covered throughout the weekend including

Writing poetry for Beginners with Iggy McGovern on Friday, 14th September at 7 p.m. in Carlow Library

Iggy McGovern is a physicist who also writes poety and is an Associate Professor in the School of Physics at Trinity College. He has had two collections of poetry published. The King of Suburbia was published by The Dedalus Press in 2005 and won the inaugral Glen Dimplex New Writers Award for Poetry. A second collection, Safe House, was published by Dedalus in 2010.

Screenwriting for Beginners with Ferdia Mac Anna on Saturday, 15th September at 11 a.m. in Carlow Library

Ferdia Mac Anna has worked as a television producer/director, journalist, magazine editor, screenwriter and scriptwriter, as well as songwriter and singer for many years. He has taught at various colleges and institutions and he currently lectures in Screenwriting and TV and Radio Broadcasting. He is perhaps best know for his three novels, The Last of the high Kings, The Ship Inspector and Cartoon City. His memoir, The Rocky Years is in development for a TV drama series. He has written one poem

Author, director and film maker Bob Quinn will give a talk entitled “Atlantean: from film to book and back again“on Saturday, 15th September at 4 p.m. in Carlow Library

Bob Quinn is primarily known as an independent film-maker, and has made more than 100 films, including Listen (1978); Self-Portrait with Red Car (1976); Poitín (1978); Caoineadh Airt Uí Laoire (1975); Atlantean (1985); and Budawanny (1987). He has received many awards, and two of his films are in the Museum of Modern Art, New York. He is also the author of Atlantean – Ireland’s North African and Maritime Heritage; Smokey Hollow, a novel; Maverick: A Dissident View of Broadcasting Today; and The Atlantean Irish: Ireland’s Oriental and Maritime Heritage. He is a member of Aosdána, and lives in Connemara.

Writing for Children with Herbie Brennan on Sunday, 16th at 2 p.m. in Carlow Library

A professional writer whose work has appeared in more than fifty countries, Herbie Brennan is enjoyed by children and adults alike. Herbie has an well-established career writing for the children’s market — from zany picture books to teenage fiction and from game books to school curriculum non-fiction. His teenage novel, Faerie Wars, also rocketed to international success. Herbie lives in an old County Carlow rectory with his wife the author, painter, therapist and crystal expert Jacquie Burgess.

An Evening with Carlow Writers’ Co-Op on Sunday, 16th at 4 p.m. in Carlow Library

Carlow Writers’ Co-Op are a group of Carlow based writers who meet every two weeks to share and explore all styles of writing. Established for a number of years and closely affiliated with Carlow County Library Service, the group will provide an evening of readings to close Pen Fest 2012.

Stay tuned to the Pen Fest page for news of workshops, lectures, participants and booking. For further information contact John at jshortall@carlowcoco.ie or phone 059 9129713. Details can be found here.

The Long story, short

Jennifer Mathews from the Cork Short Story festival likes writing stories! She really likes writing longer than the average short story and had noticed that short stories were getting…em..shorter!

It launches in October 2012 and will be exclusively online. Looking forward to it already.

She has set up a webpage and journal for all those people who like to take their time with telling a story. If you want to submit;

Short Story Guidelines

1. Stories should generally be between 4000 and 9000 words, although a few hundred words less or more are welcome. A maximum of two stories at a time will be considered. Please do not re-submit work previously declined, or work that has been published elsewhere.

2. The Long Story, Short is a literary journal for fiction only. Stories for children are not in the scope of this journal. Translations are accepted. Genre fiction will only be considered should it have very strong literary merit.

3. At this time we regret that we cannot pay contributorsDonations, no matter how small, are welcome to help fund web-hosting of The Long Story, Short so we can continue to publish work which is longer than what is found in many conventional publications.

4. The editor will endeavor to respond to writers within 8 weeks from the date they submit their work. Unfortunately, we cannot make comments on individual submissions.Submissions are welcome at any time. A reading period may be introduced in future.

5. The Long Story, Short will publish one story per month only. If your submission is unsuccessful, please do try again in future. Remember, readers make the best writers.

6. Stories must be sent in a document attached to an email (NOT pasted into the body of an email). No PDFs please. Send to longstoryshortjournal@gmail.com .

Find more here at https://longstoryshort.squarespace.com/

 

Mountains to Sea festival, Dun Laoghaire

The annual Mountains to the Sea Festival is coming up from the 4-9th September. Some brilliant names and workshops like Kevin Barry, John Banville and Derek Landy. Go see their website at http://www.mountainstosea.ie/ for more details.
I’ll be there if you are not!

 

The Chattahoochee Review needs Irish writing for publication

Great to see a demand for Irish specific writing, there is nothing like it!

TCR welcomes submissions of poetry, fiction, flash fiction, drama, and nonfiction—work reflective of a complex and contemporary Ireland—with preference given to poetry that makes careful use of voice and theme, fiction with an imaginative focus on character, and nonfiction that transcends the strictly personal. Both established and new voices encouraged. Writers outside of the U.S. may e-mail submissions to www.gpccr@gpc.edu, noting the submission’s genre and the Irish Lit issue in the subject box.

All submissions should state the author’s name, address, and email on the manuscript and should be accompanied by a short biographical statement. Submissions will be accepted until October 1, 2012, or until issue is filled. We are also considering regular submissions; see below.
Familiarity with our journal is the best way to know whether or not work is right for us. We strongly encourage buying a sample copy or subscribing; the first issue under new editorship is now available for $4 in PDF. Please buy and read it from your inbox before submitting.
Our newly-streamlined response time averages two to three months, longer only in special circumstances. We read year-round.

Send only your very best work with our assurance it will be given every consideration.
FICTION
TCR publishes high quality literary fiction characterized by interest in language, development of distinctive settings, compelling conflict, and complex, unique characters. Please read a sample copy. Fiction should be double-spaced with numbered pages and one-inch margins. Submit only one story or up to three short-shorts (500-1,000 words each) per envelope. We consider longer stories of up to 6,000 words and novellas.
POETRY
TCR publishes excellent poetry of all types, including informal personal narratives, prose poems, and formal poems. We consider English translations of poetry from other languages, in which case a brief biography of the poet and translator should be included. Poetry should be single-spaced and include three to five poems per submission.
NONFICTION
TCR publishes distinctive topical essays and personal creative nonfiction of any kind; this includes pieces that might fit into the memoir, travel, and historical nonfiction categories. We are not an academic journal and publish for a general readership. Above all, we are interested in publishing nonfiction that surprises and intrigues us.
INTERVIEWS
TCR publishes interviews with writers of all kinds: literary, academic, journalistic, and popular. Recent interviews have featured Tony Grooms, Wells Tower, Larry Brown, Claude Wilkinson, Ferreira Gullar, and Kunal Basu. Please query us (by snail mail) with a proposal for a particular interview.
REVIEWS AND REVIEW ESSAYS
TCR publishes reviews of current fiction, poetry, and nonfiction books, especially those from writers with an innovative approach to subject matter. Several related works may be reviewed at more length in a review essay that engages critical issues not appropriate to a single review. We are always in search of new reviewers. Please query us (by snail mail) about the possibility of a particular review or review essay, specifying your credentials for the review.
VISUAL ART 
TCR accepts visual art submissions, photography included, by invitation only.
PAYMENT
We typically pay $50/poem and $25/page for prose. Payment for reviews, interviews, plays, and art is determined on an individual basis. All contributors receive two copies.

This article was adapted from an article written on writing.ie, you can find the original article here.

Poetry Competition on KCLR FM-memories of childhood

“Memories of Childhood”

Sue Nunn Show listeners! Send us your poems about your memories of childhood. You can be any age and you can come from anywhere in the world; you just need to be a listener.
What are your memories of childhood? Hot summer days in the paddling pool, fishing by the river, building snowmen, looking after younger brothers and sisters, story time, saving hay, picnics, birth, death, walking for miles to get water or firewood, bringing milk to the creamery, a new pet, ice skating, camping… the happy, the tragic, the poignant, the funny. Whatever your memories, wherever they are set, put them in a poem and get them to us. (Oh yes, and please read the rules below).
Prizes
  • 1st prize: €300
  • 2nd prize: €200
  • 3rd prize: €100
The prize winners will be announced in October 2012.
All entries must be accompanied by an entry form or use the online form below.
You can request an entry form from KCLR96fm, Broadcast Centre, Carlow Road, Kilkenny or email thesuenunnshow@kclr96fm.com. You can also call 1890 909696 and request an entry form.
You can enter by post to KCLR96fm, Broadcast Centre, Carlow Road, Kilkenny.
You can also deliver your entry by hand to reception at either our Kilkenny studio, Broadcast Centre, Carlow Road, Kilkenny or our Carlow studio, Potato Market, Carlow .
Closing date – midnight, Friday 31st August 2012

A chat with Kevin Barry author of “City of Bohane” at the West Cork Literary Festival

Kevin Barry:West Cork Literary Festival, 2012

 

I got to meet and chat with Kevin Barry,author of “City of Bohane: at West Cork Literary Festival. I’ve uploaded the interview as it is. Kevin was so generous with his time and I think you will find lots of practical, solid advice for the writers out there. I’ve certainly taken it on, since the festival, I’ve focussed myself to writing a new story every day. The idea is that over the year, I’m bound to find a couple of good ideas to run with. And, it happened today! I made a kernel of something that I think I can turn into something, story like! It also occurred to me that writers are mostly inclusive and motivating folk. I don’t know any other aspect of the media world that would be so giving of their time and help. And yes, Kevin has described himself as having a gigantic ego but he absolutely hasn’t. I miss Bantry and all the writers, cannot wait to return next year. In the meantime, we have the Cork Short Story Festival to look forward to, which I will be covering. Kevin is reading at this too. Those Cork people really have it worked out, don’t they? If you haven’t had the pleasure to read “City of Bohane”, I insist you get it and devour it! You can buy it here.         This edition is the new,swankier cover. I have only got the old, orange original. Anyway, you just want to listen to Kevin. Enjoy! Listen here. kevinbarry1 I will upload part 2 after a few days!

The 2nd Best City of Bohane cover

Costa Coffee announces Annual Short Story competition

Costa and a good book-perfect!

Costa has announced the launch of the Costa Short Story Award, a brand new award for a single short story

Today Costa announced its new Short Story Award for a single, previously unpublished short story of up to 4,000 words by an author aged 18 years or over and written in English. The author’s primary residence must have been the UK or Ireland for the past three years.
Entry opens on Monday 16th July and closes at 4pm on Friday 7th September.  Entries must be submitted online via a dedicated page atwww.costabookawards.com.  Entrants need not have been previously published but publishers and agents may submit entries on behalf of authors.
All entries will be judged anonymously, without the identity of the author being available to the judges. A panel of five judges will select a shortlist of six entries which will be revealed in November. The public will then be invited to vote online for their favourite story from the six finalists.
The winner will be announced at the Costa Book Awards ceremony on 29th January 2013 and will receive £3,500; two runners-up will each receive £750.
The judges for the 2012 Costa Short Story Award are:
Richard Beard: Director of the National Academy of Writing
Fanny Blake: Novelist and Journalist; Books Editor of Woman & Home
Victoria Hislop: Writer
Gary Kemp: Songwriter and guitarist for Spandau Ballet; Actor and Writer
Simon Trewin: Agent, William Morris Endeavor
Marketing Director of Costa UK Kevin Hydes said: “What’s really exciting about our new Short Story Award is that it’s open to absolutely everyone. For the first time, we’re able to extend the reach of the Book Awards in ways we never have before. You don’t need a publisher or an agent to enter this competition, just an idea and writing talent and we’re encouraging anyone who has ever considered writing creatively, and those who write already, professionally or otherwise, to enter.”
The Costa Book Awards recognise the most enjoyable books of the last year by writers based in the UK and Ireland.  Originally established by Whitbread PLC in 1971, Costa announced its takeover of the sponsorship of the UK’s prestigious and popular book prize in 2006.
Andrew Miller won the Costa Book of the Year last year for his novel Pure.
This article was written by 16/07/2012 by Stacey Bartlett on welovethisbook.com