Staring Down the Barrel

Staring Down the Barrel

Susan McCallum-Smith

Some critics have found the protagonist of Claire Messud’s new novel unlikeable, which is not just absurd but ironic, given that the novel’s premise is society’s expectations of women’s behaviour.

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Inventing the Working Class

Inventing the Working Class

Marc Mulholland

It is unfortunate that the academy dismisses the bulk of those who learned their politics from Marx, from Karl Kautsky to Léon Blum, preferring endless dalliance instead with shades of Leninism.

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The Writing Cure

The Writing Cure

David Blake Knox

Ross Skelton’s memoir of his Antrim childhood and his unhappy relationship with his father casts light on some of the hidden complexities of Ulster society in the middle of the last century and is likely to prove a work of lasting value.

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The Empathy Man

Ruth Gilligan

Finishing a novel for Colum McCann feels like finishing a PhD. He upends the traditional maxim to “write what you know” in favour of writing “what you want to know”.

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The Meaning of Ryanair

Michael Cronin

Orwell got it wrong. It is not governments but banks, insurance companies, pension funds and low-cost airlines, the raucous cheerleaders of deregulation, that oppress and stupefy us with a network of small and baffling rules.

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The Gentleman Naturalist

David Askew

Charles Darwin’s theories of natural selection and evolution have weathered well and he cannot be held responsible for those who have developed a repugnant politics on the back of a vulgarisation of them.

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Casement Wars

Jeffrey Dudgeon

Roger Casement dared to dream and turned out to be a nation-builder, regardless of the foolish attempts of his more enthusiastic supporters to deny the reality of his sexual nature. If that was accepted, his stature would rise.

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Good Time Girls

Liam Hennessy

The Profumo Affair helped defeat a government and usher England into the Swinging Sixties. But the villains of the piece were not the politicians or the young women whose names became famous but the sleazy and prurient popular press.

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One Book, Two Cities

Tom Wall

James Plunkett’s classic novel reminds us of a society in which the poorest lived in the most appalling and hopeless conditions and the middle and upper classes were barely conscious of their existence.

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Hopkins’s Wound

Sean Sheehan

Gerard Manley Hopkins was careless of the fate of his poems, treated his muse like a slut and her children as an unwanted and vaguely sinful burden.

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Patrick Pearse Predicts the Future

Bryan Fanning

Writing in 1906, the man who would later be one of the leaders of the Easter Rising envisaged a future one hundred years hence in which Ireland would have made enormous strides and English would be taught in schools only in Belfast and Rathmines.

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The Hunger Angel

Siobhán Parkinson

Nobel Prize winner Herta Müller looked with the eyes of the victim on the political masters of terror and called it by its name.

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A Tearless People

Pádraig Murphy

The year is 1937 and the place Moscow, one of the key settings in European history and a fault line in the history of civilisation.

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And Another Thing

Enda O’Doherty

The most recent translation of WG Sebald’s work offers the expected pleasure of his engaging prose style and an introduction to the world of some intriguing German writers.

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A Millionaire of Words

Morten Høi Jensen

Joyce’s funny, moving and infuriating masterpiece should send us, not into the cold and sterile embrace of the examination room, but out again into the warm and throbbing world.

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Sacred Egoist

Michael McDonald

The Italian critic and editor Roberto Calasso enjoys a considerable reputation among the literary-critical elite, but how much substance or originality is there in his anti-rational musings?

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Not telling

Maureen O’Connor

Edna O’Brien’s memoir refuses to satisfy our curiosity or submit to the demands for interpretation. She has fought others’ desire for control from childhood, and in her eighties is still fighting.

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Birds, beasts and flowers

Gerald Dawe

DH Lawrence’s poetry offers a record of the powerful current of physical pleasure, the elusive joy of witnessing that which is different, and the kind of opinionated prickliness when things are not what they seem to be or should be.

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The Stilled World

Nicola Gordon Bowe

Unsentimental, sparing and unspecific, the painter Patrick Pye has sought figurative images to represent symbolically “the archetypes of our humanity” depicted in an alternative universe where expiation has been achieved.

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The Curator of Chiaroscuro

Sean Sheehan

Sebastião Salgado’s latest book of photographs represents nature more as a New Age dream of harmony rather than the random mayhem and violent contingency it actually is.

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Brave Answers

John McAuliffe

A new collection casts further light on the clergyman-poet RS Thomas and his two great subjects, God and Wales.

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1916 As Spectacle

Angus Mitchell

In an age when martyrdom is demonised and tagged with notions of fanaticism and people are reluctant to protest for a cause let alone die for one, 1916 presents an easy target.

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Trompe l’Oeil

Keith Payne

All is very far from what it seems in a literary mystery novel by poet Ciaran Carson set in Belfast and Paris.

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Street Smart

Fintan Vallely

Lyrics have been defined as short poems written to the accompaniment of a musical instrument, but should Paul Muldoon’s lyrics be judged primarily as poems or as songs?

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Restless Eric

John Mulqueen

Eric Hobsbawm, perhaps the most respected of twentieth century historians, still manages to impress from beyond the grave with a wide-ranging tour of culture and society.

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The Wild Harvest

Cormac Ó Gráda

Before the inexorable advance of the conifer, the picking of wild berries on Irish hillsides often provided a welcome seasonal boost in income for poorer rural families.

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A Famine Document

Laurence M Geary

In April 1847 a vessel departed from Charlestown naval yard with eight hundred tons of relief supplies for the people of the city and county of Cork, paid for by the people of Boston and other towns in Massachusetts.

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Catholic Truth

Brian Trench

The teaching of science was often a difficult matter in Irish Catholic educational institutions and respected thinkers could sometimes be met by flawed, incoherent and ignorant polemic.

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Neither Here Nor There

Amy Wilson Sheldon

Sherman Alexie writes of the lives of Washington state’s native Americans, who frequently do not feel quite at home either in Seattle or in the Indian reservations where many of them have roots.

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Getting Beyond No

Connal Parr

There are stirrings in Ulster Loyalist groupings which may, if they mature, disprove the old cliché that Northern Protestants have no culture other than the Orange Order and Rangers football club.

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Debating the Nation

John Swift

An anthology of the most important Dáil debates of the last sixty years covers vital economic matters, Northern Ireland and the nation’s ongoing difficulties with matters of sexual morality and their consequences.

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Made in China

Luna Dolezal

Dave Eggers’s beautifully written new novel offers a melancholy and dreamlike portrait of America in decline.

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A School for Booksellers

An institute founded by a scion of the Italian book distribution industry aims to arm the next generation of booksellers against the threat of being steamrollered by the online giants.

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C'est la meme chose

Some non-Anglo-Saxon cultures, and particularly the French, seem prone to national panic in the face of la globalisation. But rumours and fears of cultural extinction are greatly exaggerated.

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Tallaght, before Babel

Fionn Mac Cumhaill was well remembered until quite recently for his many exploits not too far off the route of the 65b from Hawkins Street.

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The Prussians are impressed

The German historian Friedrich Von Raumer, visiting in 1835, had never seen beggars, or popular amusements, quite like Dublin's.

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Poet, translator, patient, sinner

Oliver Bernard was a poet and an acclaimed translator of Rimbaud. He got up to a few other things as well.

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A Dublin Poem

A no-man's land twixt Norse and Brit, chained to the granite quays.

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A Tribute to Dennis O'Driscoll

Friends and fellow writers are gathering in Dublin to celebrate the poet, who died last December.

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Cronin's Titanic Ready For Launch

Nothing can go wrong. Anthony Cronin's epic poem, with music by Donal Lunny, is set to sail.

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Lydia Davis wins International Man Booker

The American minimalist short story writer follows Ismail Kadare, Chinua Achebe, Alice Munro and Philip Roth.

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John Gray's Progress

Back in 2002, John Gray's attempt to expose the supposed emptiness of our ideas of reason and progress brought Terry Eagleton out in a rash.

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Hormones Will Out

Trinity College students in the early twentieth century were denied association with women, so their energies found other outlets.

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Sky Writer

James Salter has been a full-time writer for fifty-five years. His work is critically acclaimed, yet his sales have so far been modest.

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Morning Glory Beyond Rathmines

A Dublin poem, of going and returning, from Gerard Smyth.

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The Orwell Prize

The prestigious British prize has announced its annual winners in the categories of journalism and political writing, together with a special prize for foreign correspondent the late Marie Colvin, who died in Syria.

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Speak the Best Word

Margaret Fuller, writing in 1840, had some very pertinent things to say about people who have opinions and like to sound off.

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The Seven John Murrays

One of the most prestigious of British publishers existed as an independent entity from 1768 to 2002 and published Lord Byron, Jane Austen, Charles Darwin and many others.

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No talent? His eyes flashed angrily

There is still time to book for Dan Brown in Dublin and hear how he does it.

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May we be Forgiven

Jeanette Winterson regards AM Homes's new work as the greatest American novel of our time. Be that as it may, she is very good and very very funny.

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Hawks and Other Short Stories

Peter Hollywood's collection of stories is written in clear and elegant prose shot through with a wry humour.

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The Fall of the Celtic Tiger

This book examines how the Celtic Tiger, a high growth economy, fell into a macroeconomic abyss. Throughout the book attention is devoted to who and what was responsible for the crisis and looks at what could have been done to avoid the bailout.

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Niccolo Machiavelli

This book presents an informative account of all of Machiavelli's writings and handles them with suppleness and authority, revealing deep connections between his thought and the vicissitudes of his career during a colourful and turbulent period.

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Italo Calvino, Letters 1941-1985

Calvino liked to present an inscrutable face to the world, but this collection of letters shows him  to have been gregarious, puckish, funny, combative and, above all, wonderful company.

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Bedsit Disco Queen

A wry and wise memoir of a unique career, just as distinctive as Tracey Horn's singing voice.

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In a Time of War

John Dennehy explores the profound political, economic, military and social impact of the Great war on one Irish  county - Tipperary.

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The Royal Manors of Medieval Co Dublin: Crown and Community

This book is the first full length study of the royal manors of Crumlin, Esker, Saggart and Newcastle Lyons - all in south Dublin - in the period 1170-1400.

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A Middle-Aged Orpheus Looks back at his Life

Gabriel Fitzmaurice brings us a charming a poignant retrospective on his life through new and selected sonnets.

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Eden Halt, an Antrim Memoir

Ross Skelton's memoir has impressed Roddy Doyle who says: "we read as if memory is being assembled in front of us. That precision, the beautifully executed detail makes Eden Halt a deeply moving memoir"

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Bourgeois Liberty and the Politics of Fear

The Bourgeoisie, wrote Heinrich Heine in 1842, was "obsessed by a nightmare apprehension of disaster",an "instinctive dread of communism" sapped bourgeois committment to liberal freedoms. Theirs was a "politics motivated by fear".Over the next 150 years the middle classes were condemned by the left as betrayers of liberty.This book uncovers this remarkable story including the new crusading demand for universal bourgeois liberties which has grown with the collapse of  communism.

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The Dynamics of War and Revolution: Cork City, 1916- 1918

The city of Cork experienced a political odyssey between Easter 1916 and the end of 1918. Irish Republicans evolved from a marginalised group to become undisputed political masters. The First World war created the context for this political transformation in Ireland's third- largest city.

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