What champagne was like:Carlow Writers’ First Anthology is launched by Jamie O Connell Thursday, 6th June

At last, the day is nearly here.

It has been a year’w hard work to get our first anthology launched. The Carlow Writers are launching our first anthology tomorrow evening at 7:30 in the Teach Dolmen Bar, Tullow Street at 7:30. There will be prosecco. There will be Jamie O’ Connell. There will be a Rozzie reading her story. There will be a winning short story read by Phyllis Mahoud. There will be fun, fun, fun!

The Carlow Writers are also reading at the Carlow Arts Festival in the Carlow Library, Tullow Street at 7:30 Tuesday, 11th and there will be a marvelous spread of food and drink.

Come join us to kick the Carlow Arts Festival off tomorrow evening, 6th June at 7:30 in the Teach Bar! It would be terribly bold not to.

Colum Mc Cann:Master Class for Dublin Writers’ Festival

I wanted to go to one event, at least for the Dublin Writers’ Festival 2013 and when I saw that Colum Mc Cann was giving a FREE master class in the Writers’ Centre on a sunny evening in my favourite Irish city(Galway comes close) then I got myself all organised and clicked the “Order free tickets” button on the Writers’ festival website.
Simple!
I have not read Colum’s books. Shame on me. In my defence, I am reading, reading,reading and he is on my list. I’m behind that way. I only caught the Sopranos ten years after it aired. Same as Sex and the City. And Solace. I want to be ahead but life takes over.
Now, with that openness clarified, we can both enjoy a little piece on Colum Mc Cann and his master class.
He arrived in, in teacher mode, which I was delighted with. I get very tetchy when writing events turn into to the participants taking over and telling us how they write. Etc. etc. I’m here to hear the best selling author. Quiet down the back, please.
Colum spoke for about half an hour, telling us about his use of multiple narrative voices in his book, Let the great world spin, you may have heard of it. It did okay in America.
I liked Colum’s style of teaching. He gave us a nice bit of lecturing and then encouraged(blatantly targeted and pointed fingers, teacher style) us to ask questions!
I asked him about the short story and the novel and how the narrative voices differ. He was of the opinion that multi voiced narrative doesn’t work, I would agree. The short story is a whisper in the ear so one does not have time to switch perspectives though he recommended using the first person and the third person for the same character. A hard one to pull off, he said but well worth it as it is different.

I had to skip away even though Colum hadn’t finished, to catch the train but I really enjoyed the masterclass and learned loads. Thanking the lovely people in Dublin Writers’ Centre and Dublin Writers’ Festival.

 

Review:Town and Country:New Irish Short Stories edited by Kevin Barry (Faber and Faber)

Review: Faber and Faber Town and Country: New Irish Short Stories edited by Kevin Barry.

The title and cover give a  hint towards a  far from Post Celtic landscape in Ireland and its writing. The cover art in futuristic yellow, black and white design, paints a landscape of religious buildings and skyscrapers amongst buildings in constructed transience.

Ireland is being built again from inside out and so to its writing. It is unsure to what its identity is. The title, Town and Country demonstrate a wide open feel as a member of a larger, ever expanding community. What we thought was true post boom is not and so to the Irish short story. Kevin Barry, the editor writes that:

“The Irish short story is changing and is pulsing with great, mad and rude new energies.”

But, as Ireland and its literature changes and pushes through into new ways, it is still committed to the universal theme of what it means to be a human. The strength of the short story is the ability to capture a human moment and Barry says this too:

“the contours of our great human aches and sorrows are traced here.”

To represent a new Ireland, to try to capture what it is that is Irish now, Barry has presented an anthology that contains many new voices. The book is all the better for this; With these new voices,we get stories about a  sometimes confused Ireland. The title Town and Country is an easy one to work with now, we move all around Ireland and outside of it. From the countryside, coasts and cities, we hear Irish voices and non-Irish ones.

The anthology is made up of twenty stories, never too long or short. Quite perfect. Relationships have changed in Ireland. How we love and what happens after we lose love is reflected throughout the anthology. Humanity in all its sadness and warmth comes rises up, time and time again.  A collection that tells us where we may have gone wrong and asks if we can get back on track again. Relationships and humanity are the short story’s finest strengths and it is hard not to be warmed by these snippets of humanity.

In Tiger by Michael Harding, it is 2006 and we see the remnants of the good times in a marriage and all the material items that have to be divided up in the aftermath of a divorce. The narrator now lives in a flat surrounded by “Eastern Europeans in small apartments with paper-thin walls.” His possessions are all left behind in the family home-the Aga cooker, the wok, coffee pot-all things synonymous with the Celtic Tiger years. At the end, he yearns for something real that he can never have.

Again, in Saturday, Boring by Lisa Mc Inerney, we see a new Ireland of mixed messages and pressures. This story is told from the perspective of a fifteen year old and it frightened me how real this story probably is. The teenage girl is setting out to have sex for the first time with her boyfriend of 3 weeks. The uncertainty of this act is revealed on a journey to the till in Penneys with her best friend. Once, she pays for the adult-like lingerie, the die is cast and the Rubicon has been crossed. She has made up her mind and her relationships with her father and  friendship with her best friend have changed forever. This story is handled well, it tells of the pressures young children encounter today. She feels “like there was so much to learn and so much expected of her.” but this is no naive girl. She concludes that it is all nonsense and she wants “the world to slow down its revolution as to make space for her.” By the end of the story, she feels “as old as the sea” and the adult reader will have the  benefit of knowing that her next action will not bestow any maturity on her.

In Second-Best Bar in Cadiz, we get drawn into a non-conventional love story. A man from Castlebar wants to make it big as a chef. He deludes himself, his lover is unfaithful, his brother is a dangerous gimp and his job is uncertain and uninspired. He rests all of his dreams on Oscar, his boss. The narrator wants to be more than “the man with a plastic fork in the emperor inn in Castlebar” but he cannot get away from the drugs and pointless relationships. I feared the worst for him and was relieved when Oscar’s fate was safe but the ending is worse than this. He realises that he is “The man with a plastic fork in the emperor inn in Castlebar.” We have all been there and we know he may have to settle for a part of life that he may not have imagined for himself. A return to Castlebar and all the truth it brings with it for him.

In Barcelona, Mary Costello continues to grab my admiration. She always makes it seem so simple but with one sentence, we are caught in her world, one she controls to its last breath. In this story, the narrator, Catherine is multi-faced, she is revealed piece by piece until the end. Her manic thoughts pervade the text and the setting until the ending where her husband is left confused, looking into a corner. Catherine realises that she has been too honest, she has gone too far. Her marriage is unable to cope with the reality and rawness of life. Again, a brilliant post Celtic Tiger theme and a story we have come to associate with Mary Costello, she thinks and observes and so do her characters.

Relationship breakdown and the honesty between two people is dealt with in Nuala Ní Chonchúir’s Joyride to Jupiter. The story of a man whose wife is starting to collapse with dementia in old age. Storytelling  comes too easy to Nuala. She writes the type of stories that the reader might think they could do but the way she builds this story to a tear provoking climax is a gift that is hard to come by. In Barcelona and Joyride to Jupiter, we see two very different relationships. Both deal with being true to yourself and the one you love. However, the ending for Nuala’s character was made chillingly real and left me affected. Anyone who loves takes risks, the narrator realises this and he is stirred to memories of their life together, the good times of  “paradise squares, our daughter’s nervous glancing in the rear-view, dancing in Banba Hall, a single coral rose, the spongy hump of the pillow.” The risk was worth it.

The Clancy Kid by Colin Barrett is a stand out story. Colin’s stories have been coming up every so often with these wonderful stories. His collection is due this September, an excitement for me. I find his writing very cool and urgently unique. The Clancy Kid is a good, solid Irish story centering on the character’s  relationships. It opens up in any old pub in any town in Ireland. Two men are speaking about their obsessions. One a woman he can’t have and the other a child that disappeared, the Clancy Kid. Their friendship drags through the story, rising until the strength at the end. This is a story of the bromance. A typically Irish one, there are emotions all over the place, left unsaid and at the end the narrator concludes that “we all have things we won’t let go of.” The narrator cannot let go of what he could have had with this girl and his friend cannot let go of the Clancy kid. They look back on their nameless town after a wonderfully troll fairy tale-like adventure with some scary children and they see that the kids have gone. Were they there at all? The story tells us of the importance of the simple things, growing up and the fear of letting go as we do so.  Brilliant characters, typically Irish yet brought to life with a contemporary feel. A story that left me thinking and counting the days off till September and Colin’s book is published with the Stinging Fly.

In City of Glass, its opening gives the impression that this is another story about immigration and poor old Ireland in the early 1990s where then old men cycled in bicycles. Was this another landscape heavy story by an American writer with a glint in their eye for Ireland?  But, it wasn’t. In fact, this story summarises the story of Ireland in 1989 and compares that Ireland with the one we are living in now. The author Molly Mc Closkey  says that “The country was like a beautiful failure.” She brings the main character through a series of relationships pre and post Celtic Tiger and concludes that “Now, it was like we all existed in some nebulous after-life, a vantage point from which we gazed down on everything we had destroyed…all the parallel dimensions in which we were reconciled.” A humanistic take of what went wrong in the world and Ireland and how strong relationships matter. This story cements the meaning of the stories in this book, a non sentimental look to the past can push us forward to feel gratitude that we will survive. We may not know where the future is but we can feel excited that we have come this far, from the days of the original game makers like O’ Connor and Trevor to a new pulse and style.

Barry advises us to “Watch it now as it spirals and spins out” I wait patiently  for the next Faber and Faber anthology with a strong  hope that our new community who are living here, originally coming from outside Ireland will add to this changing landscape of the Irish short story. This is my biggest wish for Irish writing and we are moving towards this. The Town and Country Anthology is a step towards that landscape.

 

KBC Dalkey Book Festival Four Forty Story Competition 2013 now open

 

 

A very cute competition for children under 13 years of age. I wish I were a little one being given the chance to write flash! Here is the writing competition from the Dalkey Book Festival 2013.

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We love reading. In fact, our appetite is so insatiable that we only stop to catch forty winks or grab the odd sandwich. Unfortunately, DBF Towers is running low on stories.

We urgently need some good stories, so we’re launching a terrific new short story competition in association with KBC. To celebrate 40 years of KBC in Ireland and 4 years of the Dalkey Book Festival, your story must be 440 words or less. If you are 13 or under (the best age for writers, we think) we desperately want you to enter. Please, please, enter as soon as you can; by next week we might be reduced to reading phone books and junk mail.

A prizewinner will be selected in each category (9 and under and 10-13yrs).
Each prizewinner will win book tokens to the value of €250, Dalkey Book Festival tickets, a festival lunch (with a chance to meet some of our children’s authors) and a two night family stay with dinner in the Fitzpatrick Castle Hotel, Killiney. Get writing!

Children’s Four Forty Story Competition – 2013

Delightful and free micro flash fiction( something short for you to read!)

The National Flash Fiction website was reintroduced to me last weekend at a writing course. Here is a link to the winners and shortlisted.

Some brilliant stuff there and some questionably different. My favourite is Slather by Clare Kirwan.

Check it out here.

It will take you 6.7 seconds or if you are slow, 7.4. I’ve timed, I’ve checked it. I do all the work in this relationship, you know.

 

Mel Ulm and the Jamie O’ Connell interview

I haven’t written about Jamie O’ Connell for a bit now. But, thankfully, Mel Ulm has given us a proper fix of the Jamie in a hugely detailed interview with the author on Mel’s Reading Lives blog.

Mel Ulm knows his stuff. He knows Irish and he knows the short story. I imagine that he spends every second reading new and old Irish literature. I really enjoy his blog and am really enjoying the Q and A for Irish writers he has running for the last while.

Jamie O’ Connell was interviewed last week and it is really is a fab read. Jamie is honest and generous in his answers to very fascinating questions and the whole thing turns very academic but not overly off-putting!

So, Mel Ulm is everywhere but Jamie seems to be back on the scene a bit more recently. Jamie is launching our group anthology in June in Carlow. He is also working on new stuff all of the time and I just cannot wait to read any of his new stuff as his last short story collection was out just a year ago so we need some new work from this man.

Also, I hear talk that he was on Sunday Miscellany last Sunday and is going to be featured regularly on RTE Radio 1 on the Sunday Miscellany program. The latest one from yesterday doesn’t seem to be available just yet but I will post when it is. 9 in the morning was just too early for a Sunday wake up call.

Have a read of the interview here, lots of great nuggets on the writer’s life and ethos.

http://rereadinglives.blogspot.ie/2013/04/jamie-oconnell-question-and-answer.html

A gutted and distraught Rozzie cannot go to Faber launch event

Faber Socials is on the Saturday, 25th May and am so not going to miss it.

Except I am. It coincides with a big family event at home, in the West and my sister would cut me off if I missed it for a book launch.

But, this is not just any ol’ launch. It’s a brand new anthology of Irish short stories. Edited by the man,  Kevin Barry, Town and Country  is featuring contributors like Patrick McCabe,Paul MurrayNuala Ní ChonchúirEimear Ryan andMichael Harding.

Apparently, everyone is going to be there. Like, everyone.

One has to even buy a ticket to attend so it must be all very special. It’s going to be launched in the Clarence Suite in Dublin at 6 p.m.

Hey, wait a minute, I don’t have to be in the West until 10:30 a.m. the day after. I could go to the Faber event, mingle and quaff nice drinks for a couple of hours and then either travel to the West that evening, arriving after midnight. Or, I could get up at 4:30 a.m. the next morning and arrive in perfect time for the West event. A third option would be to make someone dress up as me for the West event and I would take their place at the Faber event. A fourth option would be to write to the Dublin Writers’ Festival and demand(ask) that they switch the event date to the Friday instead of the Saturday. The most important thing is that I am there.

The final option is that I don’t go and just go to the West and enjoy that family day, and I will enjoy it but I would love to have two enjoys.

What do you think I should do? Click on  the poll below to help me decide. [polldaddy poll=”7068965″]

 

Hennessy literary award 2013 results

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John O’ Donnell wins Best Emerging Fiction for his strangely sweet and disturbing short story, Shelley. I remember reading this and being thoughtful about it afterwards. Dermott Healy, uber renowned poet and novelist, was inducted into the Hennessy Hall of fame. I wonder will the stories and poems from the last year will be compiled anywhere?

Bantry Lit festival 2013 is open for business!

The West Cork Literary Festival 2013 programme is out!

My must do and sees(for now) are:

Sunday evening/night

  • The opening of the Festival with Ruth Padel and her new poem for the festival and the J. G. Farrell Award.
  • Open mike with Paul O’ Donoghue-I love these and I think Paul is the perfect chilled out and mannerly, listening Chairperson for these events. They are on every evening and great fun after a few 7-ups in the Maritime Bar.
  • Dave Lordan and Karl Parkinson with the funky sounding Dropping the Act present the Freedom Poetry Show. Only thing is it is at 11:30 and a girl has got to get her sleeps but so like the sound of this!

Monday

  • 4-The Letter Café will provide complementary stationery, pens and postage, and will be open all week. Last year the WCLF posted over one hundred letters. Phillip Hensher opens this. This is a really sweet event. Last year, I wrote letters to my Aunt in Canada and she was happy! This opens in the yummy Letter Cafe in Organico’s. Food and ambience is spot on here. Just go!

Tuesday

  • Ann Enright-an evening with. The only event I might pay into. Bantry can work out expensive when you factor in week long workshop, lunch, dinner and soda water and limes. She would be worth it!

Wednesday

  • Deborah Levy-free event and reading- The title story of her most recent work of fiction, Black Vodka: ten stories, was shortlisted for the 2012 BBC International Short Story Award. Oh, yes, get me there and I will buy a book or two!
  • Fish anthology 2013 launch-say no more but one thing,its on in the Maritime Hotel this year not the lovely church..

Thursday

  • Jamie O Connell reads but at 11:15 in the morning. Should he not be sleeping? Anyway, I am at a workshop so cannot make it but I am going to write to him with a petition demanding(asking) if he will switch to 4, please?
  • Louise Doubty speaks about writing a novel in a year. Could be fun.

Friday

  • Writer idol-this is where you send a piece of your work anonymously to Bantry folk before a date in May. one-page samples of work, submitted anonymously in advance, will be read by actor and author, Kate Thompson, and when members of the panel have heard enough, they will raise one hand. Two hands up – the reading will stop and the panel will discuss the piece. Last year, bestselling author Anita Shreve, who brought Writer Idol to Ireland, commented that the quality of submissions was so high in Bantry that the panel were slow to raise their hands. This was not her experience on other WI panels. As a result, we were unable to read all of the entries, but the panel offered excellent tips pertinent to anyone hoping to be published. Wanted to go last year but didn’t. Scary stuff.

And then home….Some of the highlights, there are loads more on http://www.westcorkmusic.ie/literaryfestival/programme Be sure to check it out and get your tickets quickly as they will go…

Edge Hill Short Story Prize 2013-a powerful reading list for Rozz!

A record number of writers have entered this year’s biggie, the Edge Hill Short Story Prize..

It is the only UK award that recognises excellence in a published collection of short stories and has some pretty enticing prizes for the winning short story god or goddess!

I noticed a big number of short story writers from Ireland and am crossing every finger for them. We

The judges have to shortlist 5 names only! That is tough. It will be revealed in May and the winners announced at a plush ceremony on 4th July in London. There is a main prize of £5,000 and a Readers’ Choice of £1,000 chosen from the 5 shortlisted. That is when I will be pushing everyone to vote for the best and Irish, hopefully!

On the long-list from Ireland are:

  • Kevin Barry with his brilliant Dark Lies The Island. You know how I feel about Kevin’s unique work. Noone like him though they may try.
  • Eileen Casey  with her collection Snow Shoes. This is one I want to read but haven’t yet.
  • Nuala Ni Chonchur  with her emotive collection Mother America. Nuala is obviously a highly talented writer, that’s a given but she is also extremely generous with her time promoting literature and the short story form that I am sending all my good vibes to her!
  • Mary Costello with her breathtaking and breathe deeply collection The China Factory. This is her first collection so it would be great for her.
  • Ellis Ni Dhuibhne  and her diverse collection The Shelter Of Neighbours. I loved, loved, loved every single piece in this. She knows how to do it and has been doing for years now, well deserved and my prediction.
  • Emma Donoghue  with her short story collection Astray. Again, beautiful prose but the content of history does not connect with my reading tastes. Maybe, the judges will have a historical interest?
  • Mike McCormack – Forensic Songs. I have not read anything by Mike but my aim this year. Please, send me more time.
  • Joseph O’Connor – Where Have You Been. This is my next collection to read. It is sitting there waiting for me on the window. It looks lonely.

We really have some strong contenders there. Anyone of them is truly deserved as inspiring me and their readers to love the short story form. Best of luck to all of you in great company and you have given me another To Read list!