In these eleven stories, Éilís Ní Dhuibhne draws us into the lives of characters struggling to find equilibrium. Visited by change and crisis, they are forced to confront the stories that define their sense of themselves. Beautifully written and sharply observed, this daring collection is a deft exploration of the complexities of human desire.
Eilis Ni Dhuibhne's candid and moving memoir tells the story of her thirty-
year relationship with the love of her life, internationally renowned
folklorist Bo Almquist, capturing brilliantly the compromises and adjustments
and phases of their relationship, and of how he died.
The 14 stories in this collection demonstrate the breadth of Eilis Ni
Dhuibhne's achievement across her writing career, particularly in terms of her
depiction of the complex territory of women's lives. They are testament to her
enduring talent for weaving stories that draw us in and stay with us in the
silence, long after the story has ended.
`Richard Ford says that short stories are daring little instruments, and in
this writer's hands they shock and jolt with recognition.' Irish Times. A
brilliant and critically-acclaimed collection of short stories by one of our
finest Irish writers.
It is 1972: a group of teenagers, some from Dublin, some from Derry, spend a
month in the Donegal Gaeltacht, learning Irish language and culture. A
brilliant critically acclaimed novel about growing up.
Anna Kelly Sweeney is a writer of popular fiction intent on worldly success. Leo is an idealist who lives in rural County Kerry and devotes himself to poetry, culture and innumerable worthy causes. When Anna falls in love with the handsome and enigmatic Vincy, and Leo with troubled publicist Kate, the consequences of their glimpsed happiness reverberate beyond their own insulated worlds. Inspired by Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, this panoramic and compulsively readable new novel is an intelligent, witty and fiercely humane insight into modern Ireland. ""In this modern take on Anna Karenina, Anna Kelly Sweeney is an affluent Dublin housewife whose vast literary and financial aspirations fail to match her talents. . . A bruising commentary on the new Irish culture conveyed with a grin."" --Booklist
Seven of Irelands most accomplished female writers have crafted between them this delightfully entertaining novel. Featuring authors Maeve Binchy and Deirdre Purcell.
Exhilarated and bewildered by the relentless demands of overpowering emotion, the characters in these stories find themselves defenseless against its ultimately wrecking power. Breaking substantial new ground, both for her own work and for the short story form, this collection triumphantly confirms Ni Dhuibhne's place as one of the most questing and courageous voices in modem Irish fiction.