Paul Clements travels the length of the River Shannon by foot, bike and boat in this book, celebrating travel and wisdom.
Like its three predecessors, this fourth instalment of Trinity Tales gathers together recollections of a decade at Trinity College Dublin. This time, the story is taken up by 1990s graduates– those who passed through its gates as the twentieth century drew to a close
This hidden history pinpoints the key players in the drama and their responses, identifying Mountain Climber, a Derry... Læs mere
In his eighty-eighth year, John Boorman uses his time in lockdown to create a nature diary of the surrounding nature of County Wicklow.
From award-winning author Adrian Duncan comes his first collection of short stories. Precise and penetrating prose.
Declan Murphy embarks on a quest to study one of the most brightly-coloured birds during its nesting season, the kingfisher.
On Dangerous Ground is the striking revolutionary period memoir of Republican
Almost 300 Irish houses were burnt during the War of Independence and Civil War. Left Without A Handkerchief investigates this devastation.
Out of the Ordinary captures Dillon/Jivaka’s various journeys – to Oxford, into medicine, across the world by ship – within the major narratives of his gender and religious journeys.
The Atlantean Irish is a sumptuously illustrated, exciting, intervention in Irish cultural history. What began as a personal quest-narrative becomes a category-dissolving intellectual adventure of universal significance. It is a book whose time has arrived.
Readers are invited to visit Trinity College through the eyes of students who attended the university during the 2000s.
In 1974, 22-year-old virgin sailor Mick escapes unemployment, family and 3-day-week London to become a deckhand on a small sailboat, Gay Gander, setting out to sail the Atlantic from England's West Country, via the Canaries, to Antigua in the Caribbean.