Tag Archives: Gill & MacMillan

News

Landy, Donoghue & Binchy Among The Winners At The Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards

An emotional Emma Donoghue spoke of the importance of recognition by her homeland as she accepted the Hughes & Hughes Irish Novel Of The Year Award at Thursday evening’s ‘Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards in the Round Room Of the Mansion House.

It was a theme echoed by many of the winners, including Maeve Binchy who was awarded with a lifetime achievement award by the guest of Honour for the evening, President Mary McAleese.

Perhaps the least surprising winner of the evening was Late Last show host, Ryan Tubridy who won the Newcomer Of The Year Award.

Donal Óg Cusack won the John Murray Listeners’ Choice Award, Donal Skehan won the IES Irish Published Book Of The Year, Neil Richardson won the Argosy Irish Non-Fiction Book Of The Year, Ross O’Carroll-Kelly the Easons Popular Fiction Book Of The Year, Gene Kerrigan won the Ireland AM Crime Fiction Book Of The Year,  Niamh Sharkey took the Junior category of the DAA Irish Children’s Book Of The Year while Derek Landy took the senior category as well as accepting his Book of the Decade award.

Tom Owens, Trading Director Eason and Chairman of the Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards, said, ‘The Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards allow us the opportunity to celebrate and honour Ireland’s best literary talent. This year’s winning authors illustrate the diversity and vibrancy of the Irish book world, and each book is an outstanding literary achievement in its own right. As a country, we should be incredibly proud of these authors and the wealth of home-grown talent we have on offer.’

The full list of winners
The Hughes & Hughes Irish Novel of the Year: Room by Emma Donoghue (Picador)
RTÉ Radio 1′s The John Murray Show Listeners’ Choice Award: Come What May by Donal Og Cusack (Penguin Ireland)
The Ireland AM Irish Crime Fiction Book of the Year: Dark Times in the City by Gene Kerrigan (Vintage)
The Argosy Irish Non-Fiction Book of the Year: A Coward If I Return A Hero If I Fall by Neil Richardson (O’Brien Press)
Eason Irish Popular Fiction Book of the Year: The Oh My God Delusion by Ross O’Carroll Kelly (Penguin Ireland)
Energise Sport Irish Sports Book of the Year: A Football Man by John Giles (Hachette Books Ireland)
Irish Newcomer of the Year: JFK in Ireland: Four Days that Changed a President by Ryan Tubridy (Collins)
International Education Services Best Irish Published Book of the Year: Good Mood Food by Donal Skehan (Mercier)
The Dublin Airport Authority Irish Children’s Book of the Year:
Junior - On the Road with Mavis and Marge by Niamh Sharkey (Walker Books)
Senior – Skulduggery Pleasant: Mortal Coil by Derek Landy (Harper Collins Children’s Books)

Irish Top Ten News

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 13/11/2010

There’s no denying it, Hachette Ireland have scored a winner with the John Giles Autobiography, which this week is a convincing number one.

However, their Penguin rivals have claimed a stunning three of the top four titles including, Jamie Oliver, Ross O’Carroll-Kelly and Jeff Kinny.

It is indicative of the power of nostalgia that Soundings remains in the top ten with an impressive number of units sold too. Perhaps more surprising is the return of Stieg Larsson to the elite.

1: John Giles a Football Man, John Giles, 2,060
2: Jamie’s 30-minute Meals, Jamie Oliver, 1,990
3: Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Ugly Truth, Jeff Kinney, 1,902
4: The Oh My God Delusion, Ross O’Carroll-Kelly, 1,237
5: Guinness World Records 2011, 1,186
6: Soundings: Poems We Did for Our Leaving Certificate, 1,182
7: Room, Emma Donoghue, 1,045
8: JFK in Ireland: Four Days That Changed a President, Ryan Tubridy, 947
9:Port Mortuary, Patricia Cornwell, 946
10: The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest, Stieg Larsson, 828

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 13th November 2010
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Irish Top Ten

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 06/11/2010

It’s definitely christmas time. Guinness World Records has joined the top ten list for the first time this week with some 1,049 sales. In fact every title in the top ten sold over 1,000 units.

Penguin will be happy still with their sales even if they don’t dominate quite as much as the did a few weeks ago, they still have three titles in the top ten.

And Faber‘s entry to the Top Ten comes after Fintan O’Toole engaged in a sustained promotional week appearing in many of the radio panels on RTE and other outlets.

Interestingly, Hachette Book Group Ireland score a number 7 slot with their John Giles memoir a title that’s certain to keep selling in the run into christmas. Irish publisher, Gill & Macmillan will be pleased to see their Soundings selling so well.

Perhaps the strangest entry to the top ten, but one that fantasy and science fiction  readers will not be surprised by is the Brandon Sanderson penned Towers of Midnight, the second of three parts of the last volume of The Wheel Of Time, a series begun by Robert Jordan in the 1980s and the first volume of which was published in 1990.

1: Jamie’s 30-minute Meals, Jamie Oliver, 1,721
2: JFK in Ireland:Four Days That Changed a President, Ryan Tubridy, 1,707
3: Wasters, Shane Ross & Nick Webb, 1,544
4: Towers of Midnight, Robert Jordan & Brandon Sanderson, 1,438
5: The Oh My God Delusion, Ross O’Carroll-Kelly, 1,373
6: Enough is Enough: How to Build a New Republic, Fintan O’Toole, 1,311
7: John Giles a Football Man, John Giles, 1,309
8: Soundings: Poems We Did for Our Leaving Certificate, 1,272
9: Room, Emma Donoghue, 1,087
10: Guinness World Records 2011, ,1,049

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 6th November 2010

Books & Authors

Christmas Preview 2010 | Politics & Current Affairs

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Perhaps not the most thrilling of titles in the mix this year, Gay Mitchell’s By Dáil Account: Auditing of Government, Past, Present and Future, published by the IPA, is a book worth reading in-depth, contemplating and hoping that some of the author’s recommendations are adopted.

Likewise John McGuinness And Naoise Nunn’s book, The House Always Wins: Time To Turn The Tables offers a scathing analysis from the inside of Leinster House and some possible remedies for the situation we find ourselves in.

Enough Is Enough by Irish Times columnist Fintan O’Toole and published by Faber & Faber is sure to garner both praise and attention and joins the growing ranks of books declaring the Irish State pretty much broken and in need of reform.

In the same vein, an already released, but not to be ignored title is 2016 A New Proclamation For A New Generation by Gerard O’Neill and published by Mercier Press. Gerard, an economist who writes the excellent Turbulence Ahead blog is also a director of Amárach Research.

Just in case you’ve not quite had your fill of builders, bankers and developers, Simon Kelly’s Breakfast with Anglo from Penguin Ireland is on the shelves now and offers an inside account of how things became so crazy in the development business.

Four Courts Press bring something beyond the financial crisis and look to nature for their Deluge: Ireland’s weather disasters, 2009-2010 by Kieran Hickey which examines the extreme Irish weather of winter 2009-2010.

Finally, a big annual seller in Ireland is The Irish Times Book of the Year 2010, edited by Peter Murtagh and published by Gill & Mcmillan and 2010 is unlikely to be any different.

The Books

By Dáil Account: Auditing of Government, Past, Present and Future | Gay Mitchell
HB | €25.00 | IPA | 9781904541905
The House Always Wins: Time To Turn The Tables |
PB | €16.99 | Gill & Macmillan | 9780717147892
Enough Is Enough | Fintan O’Toole
PB | €14.99 | Faber & Faber | 9780571270088
2016 A New Proclamation For A New Generation | Gerard O’Neill
HB | €14.99 | Mercier Press | 9781856356909
Breakfast with Anglo | Simon Kelly
PB | €16.99 | Penguin Ireland | 9781844882502
Deluge: Ireland’s weather disasters, 2009-2010 | Kieran Hickey
PB | €14.95 | Four Courts Press | 9781846822711
The Irish Times Book of the Year 2010 | Edited by Peter Murtagh
HB | €26.99 | Gill & Mcmillan | 9780717147885

Books & Authors

Barry Cummins On Sunshine 106.8FM

Barry Cummins, author and journalist was on Sunshine 106.8FM’s Dublin Today with Lynsey Dolan this week. The interview is below.
Barry Cummins On Sunshine 106.8FM

Barry’s latest book, Without A Trace, is available here

Publisher’s Description
The bestselling author of Missing is back with more cases of Ireland’s disappeared — men, women and children who have vanished without trace while going about their normal lives. What happened to two young boys who vanished in Belfast while waiting for a bus in November 1974? Where is Trevor Deely, last seen walking in Dublin in December 2000? What happened to Dutch woman Leidy Kaspersma, last seen walking in Co. Kerry on a summer’s day in 1978? In Without Trace Barry Cummins profiles these and other cases of people who have vanished across Ireland in the last four decades.

He also explores dozens of cases of unidentified bodies which lie in graveyards and morgues from Donegal to Wexford. Cummins shows how Irish authorities could help to give some of these people back their identities. He examines ongoing efforts to find the bodies of IRA victims buried in secret graves in Monaghan, Meath and Louth, and delves into the cases of people abducted, murdered and secretly buried by Ireland’s criminal gangs. And there are many other types of missing person cases in this intriguing book, from a twenty-year campaign by the family of one missing woman to get answers about her case, to the amazing story of one missing Irishman’s return ‘from the grave’ in England. Without Trace is an informative and heart-stopping read.

Author Biography
Barry Cummins is a news journalist with RTÉ and the author of three previous bestsellers, Missing, Lifers and Unsolved.

Books & Authors

Christmas Preview 2010 | Biography, Autobiography & Memoir

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The Best Of Irish Biography, Autobiography

& Memoir Titles For Christmas 2010

It is a year of surprising heavyweight history biographies this year and Gill & Macmillan offers the best of them. Already released and attracting considerable news attention is David McCullagh’s The Reluctant Taoiseach: A Biography of John A. Costello. The Fine Gael Taoisigh have been somewhat under studied to my mind and recent titles have only just started to address this. It is nice in the context of under-studied Irish figures that Gill & Macmillan are also releasing Patrick Geoghegan’s Liberator: The Life and Death of Daniel O’Connell, 1830-1847, the second volume of his two-volume life of one of Ireland’s greatest Irish politicians. The author, a broadcaster as well as a professional historian, makes a passionate and convincing case for O’Connell’s continued relevance and importance even into his final years.

For under appreciated to romantically lionized, Joost Augusteijn’s Patrick Pearse: The Making of a Revolutionary, from Palgrave Macmillan is sure to get some attention, especially if it lives up to the publishers billing of offering a new and comprehensive overview of Pearse.

On a more modern slant, John Lonergan a former Governor of Mountjoy offers and fresh and open look at his life in the Irish prison service, in The Governor published by Penguin Ireland. He is unstinting in his criticism of the system he worked for over 40 years and despite some serious events in his time remains a compassionate and interesting observer of human failings.

Equally modern and offering a fascinating insight into Ireland’s celtic tiger years is The Dubliner Diaries by Trevor White published by Lilliput Press.

O’Brien Press has a brace of interesting titles for the christmas, the first touches on modern culture, Our Joe: Joe Dolan by the People who Knew him Best by Eddie Rowley a collection of anecdotes and stories about Joe Dolan. The second is another historical gem, Terence MacSwiney: The Hunger Strike that Rocked an Empire by Dave Hannigan who brought us the excellent, De Valera in America: The Rebel President’s 1919 Campaign.

Modern but with an internationalist bent is Liberties Press’ The Things I’ve Seen: Nine Lives of a Foreign Correspondent by Irish Times journalist Lara Marlowe, quite a coup for a small house. It marks a trio of fine titles from this plucky publisher too, the second of which is Just Garret: Tales From The Political Front line by former Taoiseach, Garret Fitzgerald and the third Leading Lights: The People Who’ve Inspired Me, by current labour leader and most popular politician in the country, Eamon Gilmore.

One final title warrants attention and that is The Liffey Press’ title, The Lives and Times of the Presidents of Ireland by Kevin Kenna.

The Books

The Reluctant Taoiseach: A Biography of John A. Costello| David McCullagh
HB | €27.99 | Gill & Macmillan | 9780717146468
Liberator: The Life and Death of Daniel O’Connell, 1830-1847 | Patrick Geoghegan
HB | €24.99 | Gill & Macmillan | 9780717146659
Patrick Pearse: The Making of a Revolutionary | Joost Augusteijn
PB | €21.99 | Pagrave Macmillan | 9780230277656
The Governor | John Lonergan
PB | €16.99 | Penguin Ireland | 9781844882403
The Dubliner Diaries | Trevor White
PB | €9.99 | The Lilliput Press | 9781843511809
Our Joe | Eddie Rowley
PB | €16.99 | The O’Brien Press | 9781847172198
Terence MacSwiney: The Hunger Strike that Rocked an Empire | Dave Hannigan
PB | €14.99 | The O’Brien Press | 9781847171825
The Things I’ve Seen: Nine Lives of a Foreign Correspondent | Lara Marlowe
PB | €17.99 | 9781907593048
Just Garret: Tales from the Political Front Line | Garret Fitzgerald
HB | €30.00 |
Leading Lights: The People Who’ve Inspired Me | Eamon Gilmore
HB | €30.00 | Liberties Press | 9781905483396
The Lives and Times of the Presidents of Ireland | Kevin kenna
PB | €18.95 | The Liffey Press | 9781905785841

Irish Top Ten

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 30/10/2010

A good week for Ryan Tubridy, Soundings and Dan Shanahan. Tubridy enters the top ten after just a week of sales and looks set to do well if he can maintain sales of that magnitude. Soundings re-enters the chart after a third reprint and is surely on course for many, many christmas stockings. Shanahan’s biography looks like it has the makings of a real Christmas winner for Transworld Ireland. Not to be ignored is the fact that two Booker nominated titles (including the winner) remain in the top ten here.

1: The Oh My God Delusion, Ross O’Carroll Kelly, 1,792
2: Jamie’s 30-minute Meals, Jamie Oliver, 1,702
3: Soundings:Poems We Did for Our Leaving Certificate, 1,456
4: Room, Emma Donoghue, 1,182
5: Wasters, Shane Ross & Nick Webb, 1,175
6: JFK in Ireland: Four Days That Changed a President, Ryan Tubridy, 1,116
7: The Finkler Question, Howard Jacobson, 1,038
8: The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest, Stieg Larsson, 943
9: Dan Shanahan – If You Don’t Know Me, Don’t Judge Me, Dan Shanahan, 929
10: The Reversal, Michael Connolly, 927

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 30th Oct 2010

News

The Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards Shortlist Announced

The shortlist for the Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards was announced this evening at an event in the Royal College Of Physicians on Kildare Street.

Among those nominated are, Ryan Tubridy, Joseph O’Connor, Roddy Doyle, Colm Toibin, Colum McCann, Paul Murrary and Booker shortlisted, Emma Donoghue.

Tom Owens, Trading Director, Eason and Chairman of the Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards, said, ‘The new look Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards is a welcome leap forward for the Irish book sector. These industry-wide awards allow us to showcase the rich and diverse selection of Irish writing available and we are proud to say that 2010 has produced a fine selection of books that would rival any on the world stage. In these difficult times, nothing represents value for money better than a book and it is important to use these awards as a platform to celebrate our Irish authors and recognise their talent.’

Public Voting
From today, the public are being asked to cast their vote on the best books of the last year via the Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards website www.irishbookawards.ie and every person who votes will be in with a chance of winning one of five €100 National Book Token vouchers.

To help readers a free Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards 2010 magazine will be available in book retailers throughout the country. Votes can be cast until midnight November 21st 2010.

Publishing Companies
With some eleven nominations between their Irish and UK imprints, Penguin leads the shortlists, with Hachette scoring an impressive eight nominations though with two nominations for Orion titles, the wider Hachette group actually comes quite close to equalling Penguin.

Irish publishers have not been ignored either with titles by O’Brien, Mercier, Liberties, Gill & Macmillan, Brandon and The History Press, Ireland all included.

Self-Publisher, Benji Bennet is also nominated for his Adam’s Pirate Treasure.

Lifetime Achievement Award
The winners will be announced at an awards dinner which takes place in The Mansion House on November 25th 2010. As part of the ceremony, novelist Maeve Binchy will also be presented with a ‘Lifetime Achievement Award in Irish Literature’. Former recipients of this accolade include Edna O’Brien, William Trevor and John McGahern.

The full list of categories and nominees is below:

Hughes & Hughes Irish Novel of the Year
Let the Great World Spin, Colum McCann, Bloomsbury
Brooklyn, Colm Toibin, Viking
Skippy Dies, Paul Murray, Hamish Hamilton
Ghost Light, Joseph O’Connor, Harvill Secker
The Dead Republic, Roddy Doyle, Cape
Room, Emma Donoghue, Pan Macmillan

Argosy Irish Nonfiction Book of the Year
Wasters, Shane Ross and Nick Webb, Penguin Ireland
Who Really Runs Ireland, Matt Cooper, Penguin Ireland
Ship of Fools, Fintan O’Toole, Faber
At Five in the Afternoon, Michael Murphy, Brandon
A Coward if I Return, A Hero if I Fall, Neil Richardson, O’Brien Press
JFK in Ireland: Four Days that Changed a President, Ryan Tubridy, Collins

Ireland AM Crime Fiction Book of the Year
City of Lost Girls, Declan Hughes, John Murray
Time of Death, Alex Barclay, Harper Collins
Faithful Place, Tana French, Hachette Books Ireland
The Missing, Jane Casey, Ebury
Dark Times in the City, Gene Kerrigan, Vintage
The Twelve, Stuart Neville , Vintage

Easons Popular Fiction Book of the Year
Stand By Me, Sheila O’Flanagan, Headline
Pieces of my Heart, Sinead Moriarty, Penguin Ireland
Hello, Heartbreak, Amy Huberman, Penguin Ireland
At Home with the Templetons, Monica McInerney, Pan Macmillan
The Oh My God Delusion, Ross O’Carroll Kelly, Penguin Ireland
Homecoming, Cathy Kelly, Harper Collins

Best Newcomer of the Year
The Twelve, Stuart Neville, Vintage
JFK in Ireland: Four Days that Changed a President, Ryan Tubridy, Collins
The Soldier’s Song, Alan Monaghan, Pan Macmillan
Not Untrue and Not Unkind, Ed O’Loughlin, Penguin Ireland
If I Never See You Again, Niamh O’Connor, Transworld
Hello, Heartbreak, Amy Huberman, Penguin Ireland

IES Best Irish-published Book of the Year
Strangest Genius; the Stained Glass of Harry Clarke, Lucy Costigan & Michael Cullen, History Press
Vanishing Ireland: Further Chronicles of a Disappearing World, Turtle Bunbury & James Fennell, Hachette Books Ireland
Good Mood Food, Donal Skehan, Mercier Press
From the Republic of Conscience Stories Inspired by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Various, Liberties Press
Catherine’s Italian Kitchen, Catherine Fulvio, Gill & Macmillan
The Beaut.ie Guide to Gorgeous, Aisling McDermott , Gill & Macmillan

DAA Childrens Book of the Year
Junior
Adam’s Pirate Treasure, Benji Bennett, Adams Printing Press
The Heart and the Bottle, Oliver Jeffers, Harper Collins Children’s Books
On the Road with Mavis and Marge, Niamh Sharkey, Walker Books
Alfie Green and the Chocolate Cosmos, Joe O’Brien, O’Brien Press

Senior
Ask Amy Green: Bridesmaid Blitz, Sarah Webb, Walker Books
Skulduggery Pleasant: Mortal Coil, Derek Landy, Harper Collins Children’s Books
Timecatcher, Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick, Orion
Noah Barleywater Runs Away, John Boyne, David Fickling

Energise Sport Irish Sports Book of the Year
A Football Man, John Giles, Hachette Books Ireland
Screaming at the Sky, Tony Griffin, Transworld Ireland
The Ecstasy and the Agony, Damien Tiernan, Hachette Books Ireland
Lansdowne Road – The Stadium, The Matches, The Greatest Days, Gerard Siggins & Malachy Clerkin, O’Brien Press
Come What May, Donal Og Cusack, Penguin Ireland
Ruby: The Autobiography, Ruby Walsh, Orion

The John Murray Show Listeners’ Choice Award
Freedom, Jonathan Franzen, Fourth Estate
The Slap, Christos Tsiolkas, Tuskar Rock
A Journey, Tony Blair, Hutchinson
At Five in the Afternoon, Michael Murphy, Brandon
The Book of Tomorrow, Cecelia Ahern, Harper Collins
Come What May, Donal Og Cusack, Penguin Ireland

News

Gill & Macmillan Orders Third Reprint Of Soundings

With some 10,000 back orders for the new edition of Soundings, Gill & Macmillan Sales Director Peter Thew has ordered a third reprint of the title.

Although it only reached the stores in early October, the book has already sold out in many locations and reached the top ten in its first week, selling just under 1,000 units in the space of a few days.

According to the company, ‘Bookshops have been inundated with requests for Soundings.’

Adrian White of Dubray Books said ‘we’d anticipated Soundings tapping into a rich vein of nostalgia and proudly featured the book as a Dubray recommends title for October, but we had no idea it would be such an instant runaway bestseller.’

The original edition of Soundings was designed as a stopgap anthology of poetry for the Leaving Cert that ended up being used for 26 years. The new edition features a foreword by Joseph O’Connor

The publication of the new edition made headline news, an appropriate tribute to the original editor Augustine Martin who died tragically in 1995, aged just 59, almost 15 years ago to the date the book was re-launched with a family celebration in Doheny and Nesbitts.

Books & Authors News

Christmas Preview 2010 | Irish History

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The Best Of Irish History Titles For Christmas 2010

The sheer volume of Irish History titles that come on the market in any one year makes picking even a small number of them for this preview a difficult task. However some do stand out for a variety of reasons.

The one likely to get the most attention in the press is of course Ryan Tubridy’s, JFK In Ireland: Four Days That Changed A President. HarperCollins have staked quite a bit on their two book deal with Tubridy and he himself mentions the books on a fairly regular basis. What’s more JFK is popular still in Ireland and I’d expect the attention to be reflected in good sales.

Another candidate for high sales in Gill & Macmillan published, THE IRA – A Documentary History by Brian Hanley, a frankly gorgeously illustrated work that will appeal to both dedicated history buyers and a more gift orientated buyer. Much more controversial and definitely bound to attract column inches, is Gerard Murphy’s The Year of Disappearances: Political Killings in Cork, 1920-1921, also published by Gill & Macmillan.

O’Brien PressA Coward If I Return, A Hero If I Fall: Stories Of Irishmen In world War I, by Neil Richardson is a great book touching on territory that Irish society has slowly but surely been coming to terms with over the last few years. The powerful illustrations and the striking cover are likely to attract sales over the christmas.

Brandon will publish, Dissent Into Treason: Unitarians, King-killers And The Society Of United Irishmen, by Fergus Whelan in November. The book, while maybe not having the popular appeal of some others nonetheless deals with the fascinating origins of Irish Republicanism in the days of Cromwellian repression of Ireland.

Collins Press in Cork publish, Remember When: Pictures from the Irish Examiner Archive, which will no doubt sell exceptionally well in Cork, but also nationwide. Mercier Press‘ big Christmas title may well be Raymond O’Reagan’s Hidden Belfast: Benevolence, Blackguards and Balloon Heads which is part of their Hidden series, which now has three titles in print (Dublin and Cork being the other two).

Not to be ignored either is the Royal Irish Academy‘s latest publication, The Cosgrave Party: A History of Cumann na nGaedheal by Ciara Meehan. Given the recent form of the RIA with two successful Christmas releases behind, I’d imagine this might go well, it’s also a relatively understudied part of our history.

Quite the mix for the christmas season then.

The Books

JFK In Ireland: Four Days That Changed A President | Ryan Tubridy
HB | €24.99 | Collins | 9780007317592
THE IRA – A Documentary History | Brian Hanley
HB | €24.99 | Gill & Macmillan | 9780717148134
A Coward If I Return, A Hero If I Fall: Stories Of Irishmen In world War I | Neil Richardson
PB | €19.99 | O’Brien Press | 9781847171313
Dissent Into Treason: Unitarians, King-killers And The Society Of United Irishmen | Fergus Whelan
PB | €19.99 | Brandon | 9780863224294
Remember When: Pictures from the Irish Examiner Archive
HB | €29.99 | Collins Press | 9781848890626
Hidden Belfast: Benevolence, Blackguards and Balloon Heads | Raymond O’Reagan
HB | €19.99 | Mercier Press | 9781856356831
The Cosgrave Party: A History of Cumann na nGaedheal | Ciara Meehan
HB | €30.00 | RIA | 9781904890652