The Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards has announced the shortlist for the Irish Book of the Decade.
The public has been invited to vote for their favourite from what is a broad list containing literary fiction, commercial fiction, memoir and autobiography as well as on-fiction, adult’s and children’s titles.
The title with the most votes by the close of voting on May 28th will be awarded a special Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards Irish Book Of the Decade trophy.
The full list is below:
PS I Love You, Cecelia Ahern
The Sea, John Banville
The Secret Scripture, Sebastian Barry
A Long Long Way, Sebastian Barry
There Are Little Kingdoms, Kevin Barry
Havoc in Its Third Year, Ronan Bennett
Heart and Soul, Maeve Binchy
The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas, John Boyne
Artemis Fowl, Eoin Colfer
The Lovers, John Connolly
It’s a Long Way from Penny Apples, Bill Cullen
Bog Child, Siobhan Dowd
Paula Spencer, Roddy Doyle
Tatty, Christine Dwyer Hickey
The Stolen Village, Des Ekin
The Gathering, Anne Enright
Judging Dev, Diarmaid Ferriter
In the Woods, Tana French
The Speckled People, Hugo Hamilton
Foolish Mortals, Jennifer Johnston
Keane, Roy Keane
Walk the Blue Fields, Claire Keegan
Lessons in Heartbreak, Cathy Kelly
With My Lazy Eye, Julia Kelly
This Charming Man, Marian Keyes
Tenderwire, Claire Kilroy
Skulduggery Pleasant, Derek Landy
Molly Fox’s Birthday, Dirdre Madden
Winterwood, Patrick McCabe
Let The Great World Spin, Colm McCann
The Builders, Frank/Cathy McDonald/Sheridan
Memoir, John McGahern
That They May Face The Rising Sun, John McGahern
Back From The Brink, Paul McGrath
The Pope’s Children, David McWillians
A Secret History of the IRA, Ed Moloney
In the Forest, Edna O’Brien
Should Have Got Off at Sydney Parade, Ross O’Carroll Kelly
Star of the Sea, Jospeh O’Connor
Stepping Stones, Dennis/Seamus O’Driscol/Heaney
Yours Faithfully, Sheila O’Flanagan
Netherland, Joseph O’Neill
The Truth Commissioner, David Parks
Connemara: Listening to the Wind, Tim Robinson
Forgive and Forget, Patricia Scanlan
The Parish, Alice Taylor
The New Policeman, Kate Thompson
Brooklyn, Colm Tóibín
The Master, Colm Tóibín
The Story of Lucy Gault, William Trevor
Guest Column: My Business Is Your Business
Six months ago we opened The Gutter Bookshop in the middle of a recession and in a climate where small independent businesses are being forced to close at an alarming rate.
Time will tell if we are mad to do it but we went with our eyes, and our ears, open.
The following are statements from the original business plan written in 2007:
Small businesses cannot hope to compete with larger businesses by offering their customers the same things as their larger competitors. They need to find a USP (Unique Selling Point) and for many small businesses this involves building personal relationships with their customers.
We currently run a website that includes a personal blog, a Facebook page, a Twitter account, and a monthly mailing list which allows us to talk to and, most importantly, listen to approximately 2,500 potential customers.
This is on top of our regular in-store events which encourage new people to visit the store and become involved with its development. We also have a number of regular customers who give us feedback on what they like, and sometimes dislike, about the store. It is hard work at times staying on top of it all but it allows us to ‘tweak’ our business to meet our customers’ needs and expectations, and to involve them in the way the bookshop develops.
We use social networking (Facebook, Twitter) to understand our customers but also to make them feel they are part of our business, that they ‘own’ part of our store. We listen and respond to their comments and questions and offer opinions of our own just like any conversation between friends.
Small businesses are personal, and whilst care needs to be taken to remain professional and courteous, it’s also important that people recognize that there are people behind the logos and that these people want to engage and have conversations with them.
Will it be enough to keep this newly born business alive? I don’t know. But I do know that we have a lot of people who are enthusiastic about our business and are willing to engage with us on making it a success, and that gives us a great deal of encouragement, and a sense of purpose.