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Saoirse Ronan to star in RTÉ series to mark Ireland's Decade of Centenaries


Saoirse Ronan to star in RTÉ series to mark Ireland’s Decade of Centenaries
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In a landmark contribution to the Decade of Commemorations, RTÉ Radio 1 has commissioned a series of 12 half hour stories from the finest writers associated with Ireland for a radio and podcast series. 
Spoken Stories Independence will start this Sunday at 7pm on RTÉ Radio 1.   
Among the writers are Dublin Literary Prize winners, a Booker Prize winner, an IFTA award winner, an Oscar winning writer, authors whose work has been awarded Irish short story of the Year, as well as numerous other international awards and short-listings, along with major national and international publishing contracts.

China , Ireland , Dublin , Chinese , Irish , Saoirse-ronan , Danielle-mclaughlin , Neil-jordan , Anne-enright , Eoghan-mac-giolla , Sally-rooney , Mike-mccormack

Book giveaway for Follow Me to Ground: A Novel by Sue Rainsford Jan 09-Feb 08, 2021


Giveaway dates:
Jan 09
- Feb 08, 2021
Countries available:
U.S.
Sue Rainsford is a fiction and arts writer based in Dublin. A graduate of Trinity College, she completed her MFA in writing and literature at Bennington College, Vermont. She is a recipient of the VAI/DCC Critical Writing Award, the Arts Council Literature Bursary Award, and a MacDowell Colony Fellowship. When it was first published, Follow Me to Ground won the Kate O’Brien Award and was longliste
Sue Rainsford is a fiction and arts writer based in Dublin. A graduate of Trinity College, she completed her MFA in writing and literature at Bennington College, Vermont. She is a recipient of the VAI/DCC Critical Writing Award, the Arts Council Literature Bursary Award, and a MacDowell Colony Fellowship. When it was first published, Follow Me to Ground won the Kate O’Brien Award and was longlisted for the Desmond Elliott Award and the Republic of Consciousness Award.

Bennington-college , Vermont , United-states , Trinity-college , Dublin , Ireland , Arts-council-literature-bursary-award , Sue-rainsford , Writing-award , Macdowell-colony , Kateo-brien-award

Spoken Stories Independence - RTÉ Radio 1's new writing showcase


Wildlife read by Anne Enright launches
Spoken Stories Independence, a new collection of short stories commissioned by RTÉ Radio.
Spoken Stories is a new concept of commissioning short fiction under a common theme or thread, in which we are treated to experiencing them read directly by their authors or by invited readers.
The series starts at 7pm this Sunday, 10th January on RTÉ Radio 1 and runs weekly through until Easter, featuring one new story each week - listen to and download
Wildlife here. 
This collection originates from a consideration of independence, a hundred years after Ireland's War for Independence. In this way,

United-kingdom , China , Cape-breton , Nova-scotia , Canada , Ireland , Chinese , Irish , Colin-barrett , Saoirse-ronan , Neil-jordan , Danielle-mclaughlin

Books to look out for in 2021


Books to look out for in 2021
Irish fiction
New work that has been a long time coming generates a particular shiver of anticipation.
Small Things Like These (Faber, October) will be Claire Keegan’s first new work since her novella Foster, still a bestseller 10 years on. Her publisher says: “An exquisite wintery parable, Claire Keegan’s long-awaited return tells the story of a simple act of courage and tenderness, in the face of conformity, fear and judgment.”
Small Things Like These (Faber, October) will be Claire Keegan’s first new work since her novella Foster, still a bestseller 10 years on. Photograph: Alan Betson

Arkansas , United-states , Australia , Sandycove , Cork , Ireland , United-kingdom , Dublin , Russia , Temple-house , Sligo , Blackrock

2021 in books: what to look forward to this year


Chronicles from the Land of the Happiest People on Earth by Wole Soyinka (Bloomsbury)
The Nobel laureate’s first novel in almost 50 years promises “murder, mayhem and no shortage of drama” in contemporary Nigeria.
The Thursday Murder Club 2 by Richard Osman (Viking)
Last year the
Pointless co-host’s cosy crime debut set in a retirement home broke sales records; here comes the sequel.
Waters of Salvation by Richard Coles (W&N)
A new crime series from everyone’s favourite vicar begins as a proposal to refurbish a village church ends in murder; Canon Daniel Clement must investigate.
Oh, William! by Elizabeth Strout (Viking)

Australia , Bristol , City-of , United-kingdom , United-states , Paris , France-general , France , China , Jamaica , Open-water , Northern-cape

Poetic champions and fiction greats


Art imitates life and the novels of 2021 confirm just how true this is. Writers, like everyone else, found themselves confined this year and the result is the recurring leitmotif of family, pervading almost every fiction genre from crime to coming-of-age novels, from historical fiction right through to dystopia. Here are some examples from the leading titles of the new year.
January
Billy O'Callaghan's Life Sentences (Jonathan Cape) is a family saga sweeping from famine Ireland right through to the 1980s. The Push (Penguin) by Ashley Audrain is a psychological thriller about a mother who believes her daughter to be bad, with shades ofWe Need to Talk About Kevin.

Germany , Dubai , Dubayy , United-arab-emirates , United-states , India , United-kingdom , South-carolina , Long-island , Kerry , Ireland