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.
The Dublin Architecture Guide is a companion guide to the modern
This forensic account of the academic life of Eda Sagarra is a keen awareness of the constant if subtle barriers to female advancement.
In The Written World, Kevin Power explains how he became a critic and what he thinks criticism is.
Yell, Sam, If You Still Can by Maylis Besserie shows us Samuel Beckett at the end of his life in 1989, living in Le Tiers-Temps retirement home.
Edith by Martina Devlin, a new novel based on the life of Edith Somerville of ‘Somerville and Ross’ fame.
Fierce Love is a compelling and candid biography of Cork-born theatre pioneer (1918-2006) Mary O’Malley, founder-director of Belfast’s Lyric Players Theatre from 1951 to 1981.
Bungalow Bliss, first published in 1971, radically transformed housing in Ireland. Now, for the first time, author and structural engineer Adrian Duncan... Læs mere
The Road to Riverdance by Bill Whelan is a skilfully attuned record of one of Ireland’s most famous and influential composers.