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Sean O’Reilly

May 31, 2011
By
Sean O’Reilly

Sean O’Reilly was born in Derry in 1969. He has published a collection of short stories, Curfew and Other Stories (London, Faber & Faber, 2000). His novels are Love And Sleep (Faber & Faber, 2002); The Swing of Things (Faber & Faber, 2004); and Watermark (Dublin, The Stinging Fly Press, 2005).

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Emer Martin

March 9, 2010
By
Emer Martin

Emer Martin is a Dubliner and has lived in Paris, London, the Middle East, and various places in the U.S. Her first novel Breakfast in Babylon won Book of the Year 1996 in her native Ireland at the prestigious Listowel Writers’ Week. Houghton Mifflin released Breakfast in Babylon in the U.S. in 1997. She...

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Mick O’Dea

November 26, 2009
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Mick O’Dea

Born in Ennis, County Clare in 1958, Mick O’Dea studied at the National College of Art and Design and the University of Massachusetts from 1976 to 1981. In 1997 he was awarded an M.A. in European Fine Art from the Winchester School of Art having studied in in Barcelona and Winchester. He has won...

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Peter Murphy

October 21, 2009
By
Peter Murphy

Peter Murphy is a writer, spoken word performer, musician and journalist. His first novel John the Revelator was published in the UK and Ireland by Faber & Faber and in the US by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in 2009, was shortlisted for the Kerry Group Fiction Prize in May 09, and longlisted for The Guardian’s...

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Timothy O’Grady

September 5, 2009
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Timothy O’Grady

Timothy O’Grady is the author of the prize-winning novel Motherland and co-author with Kenneth Griffith of Curious Journey: An Oral History of Irelands’s Unfinished Revolution. His most recent work, I Could Read the Sky is a collaboration, in the shape of a lyrical novel, between writer Timothy O’Grady and photographer Steve Pyke. Pyke’s photographs–portraits,...

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Michael O’Loughlin

September 5, 2009
By
Michael O’Loughlin

I started school in St. Canice’s at the age of seven. My future comrade Dermot Bolger sat in the next door classroom, though it would be 10 years before we were formally introduced. Our classrooms looked out at St. Canice’s Church. On my way home after school, I used to stop and sit in...

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John Moriarty

September 4, 2009
By
John Moriarty

‘In the eighteenth century Blake wrote two books – he wrote one called America, A Prophesy and the other called Europe A Prophesy, and this was in French revolutionary times when people were redesigning humanity, redesigning their world completely you know… and so he was trying to re-shape, reform, re-think, re-invent humanity in those...

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Anatoly Kudryavitsky

September 4, 2009
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Anatoly Kudryavitsky

Anatoly Kudryavitsky was born in Moscow on Chekhov Street. That’s why his father, a great fan of Anton Chekhov, always called his son Anthony, but his mother kept calling him Anatoly; the subject his parents never agreed on. Anyway, he feels comfortable using either name or both. Anatoly was born in Russia; however his...

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Judith Mok

September 3, 2009
By
Judith Mok

Poetry is a pink apron. Recently, I remembered wearing a pink apron when I was nine years old and went to the girl’s school the: Ecole Frederic Mistral in Menton on the Cote d’Azur in France. The apron, our uniform in class, was something I had never worn in Holland, the country where I...

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Tom Mathews

September 3, 2009
By
Tom Mathews

Tom Mathews has been described by the Irish Times as “an Institution in Dublin for 30 years”. His own description is equally compelling: “Tom Mathews (Born 1952) is well over four feet tall. “Tom Mathews (Born 1952) is well over four feet tall. His Cupid’s bow legs and long flaming red nose have made...

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