Tag Archives: Irish

Briefly Noted

Briefly Noted | Cló Litriocht announces Macbeth e-book – Start Ups – Start-Ups | siliconrepublic.com – Ireland's Technology News Service

Cló Litriocht, part of the Bard na nGleann group, was set up in 2010 and provides digital archiving and publishing solutions. Its goal is to help authors and publishers convert their titles to digital format, either for archiving or to allow them distribute their titles as e-books.

via Cló Litriocht announces Macbeth e-book – Start Ups – Start-Ups | siliconrepublic.com – Ireland’s Technology News Service.

Books & Authors

Emma Hannigan On Sunshine 106.8FM

Fresh from a sparkling appearance on the Late Late Show with Ryan Tubridy, Emma Hannigan spoke on Dublin’s Talking with Lynsey Dolan on Sunshine 106.8FM.

Emma Hannigan On Sunshine 106.8FM

Emma’s two most recent books, Talk To The Head Scarf (Non-Fiction, Hachette Ireland) and Miss Conceived (Fiction, Poolbeg).

Publishers Description
Imagine you’re thirty-two, married, with two little children and you find out you’re carrying a deadly cancer gene?

That was me in August 2005. I discovered I had the gene Brca1, which means a 50% chance of developing ovarian and an 85% chance of developing breast cancer.

I had two options – wait for the big bad cancer wolf or have radical surgery. I chose the latter. Over the following year, I had a double mastectomy and both ovaries removed, which reduced my cancer risk to 5%.

I was just dressing in my victory dance outfit, when my worst fears were realised. Cancer had struck anyway. Between 2007 and 2010, I battled and slayed cancer six times.

This book takes you on my journey during that turbulent time in my life. If you’ve just been diagnosed with cancer, I know you are scared. I was too. But I want you to know you are not alone. More than that, I want you to know that I am still here.

The score so far is – Cancer 0 : Emma 6.

Even if my cancer returns, I will keep on crusading. I can show you how being positive and a big dollop of black humour can go a very long way towards getting better. So chin up, wig on and don’t forget, your skin can absorb an astonishing amount of make-up on those bad hair days!

Love
Emma Hannigan

Books & Authors

Donal MacIntyre On Sunshine 106.8FM

Journalist and author Donal MacIntyre was on Sunshine 1096.8FM’s Dublin Today with Lysney Dolan last week. The interview is below:
Donal MacInytre
Donal’s newest book is the first from new publisher Y Books and can be bought here.
Book Description
Donal MacIntyre has skydived over the Arctic, raced camels in the Arabian sands and opened his very own brothel in the heart of Camden Town. He has gone undercover with football hooligans, befriended notorious gangsters and gotten up close and personal with Johnny ‘Mad Dog’ Adair and his devoted neo-Nazi followers. He was abducted by warlords in the Congo and has spent time on death row in America’s most infamous penitentiary. From the depths of the criminal underworld to the sequined heights of Dancing on Ice, MacIntyre confounds, amuses and astounds.

In Hitmen, Gangsters, Cannibals and Me, Donal opens up his reporter’s notebook for the first time to reveal the compelling story of the man behind the stories. In this candid and revealing memoir, we are given a fascinating and hilarious insight into what it means to truly live a live without limits.

Audio

Risteard Mulcahy On Sunshine Radio

Nice piece of audio with Risteard Mulcahy from Dublin Today on Sunshine 106.8FM.
CountryMix_2010-09-24_10-00-00 Risteard


Also read this incredibly harsh review from the Herald’s Femme section:

Perhaps this is what makes the actions of renowned cardiologist Risteard Mulcahy so hard to accept. A noted heart expert, writer and campaigner, behind his public image Mulcahy lived a private life that was completely at odds with his image as a great healer. And, as his nauseating new memoirs show, the man who is so skilled at fixing hearts is disgustingly nonchalant about breaking them.

Maybe it’s trite to expect a cardiologist to view the heart as anything other than a vital organ. The nowretired Mulcahy certainly doesn’t appear to have been swayed by symbolism, given that he was never too concerned about inflicting emotional wounds on others. You might say it was a case of a cardiologist completely lacking a heart of his own.

News

Daily Links 28/09/2010

For Banned Books Week 25 September – 2 October
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
About as good as fiction gets
Solid review For Franzen in the times!
Read more…

Colm Tóibín’s hard-won wisdom
Here’s what the times thinks of Toibin’s latest.
Read more…

Are Dublin’s literary connections just accidents of birth?
Interesting article from the Times!

Read more…

Review: How the boy next door turned out by Diarmuid gavin
I suspect Diarmuid Gavin’s book will sell better in the UK than in Ireland, but I’d almost like to be proved incorrect!
Read more…

Review: Murky past is captivating from the start
Great review for Tana French from the Sunday indo
Read more…

Paperbacks Tom Widger
Nuala Ní Chonchúir’s Ypu get’s a review in the Tribune
Read more…

Book Review – The Empty Family
A third review for Toibin, certainly the most reviewed book of the weekend.
Read more…

Bringing it all back home
Charlie’s a grand fellow.
Read more…

Women writers desperate for credibility, but not readers . . .
Controversial
Read more…

Review: Sarah Love by Geraldine O’Neill
Read more…

Review: Homecoming by Cathy Kelly
Read more…

Buy The Empty Family & Freedom from The Book Depository

News

CJ Fallon & HMH Launch Irish Version Of Destination Maths

Irish Educational publisher CJ Fallon has worked with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH) to launch a localised version of HMH’s internationally used Destination Maths.

The site is based on CJ Fallon’s Mathemagic series and can be access on the website DestinationMaths.ie.

HMH, formerly know as Riverdeep, is headed by Irishman Barry O’Callaghan. Earlier this year it underwent a radical refinancing that wiped put considerable shareholder value.

The division behind this development is HMH Innovation based in Dublin.

CJ Fallon is one of Ireland’s oldest and best known educational publishers.

Comment & Features iPad Launch

To E Or Not To E: A Beginner’s Guide To iPad Ereading Apps

This week Amazon announced that, for the first time ever on Amazon.com, ebooks had outsold hardbacks, proving that whilst some of us are reluctant to part with our beloved bound volumes, there is an ever increasing number embracing the concept of electronic reading.

And with Apple‘s much heralded iPad finally launching on these shores, we decided to take a look at some of the various apps available for reading books on your iPads, iPods and iPhones, and determine which, if any, are worth their salt.


All reviewed Apps are available for free on the iTunes App Store. Our thanks to O2 Ireland for lending us an iPad for testing. We downloaded our books & apps using their 3G simcard.


App: Kindle | Developer: Amazon | Rating: 2.5/5
A version of Amazon’s popular Kindle reader, this app’s great strength is undoubtedly its selection of titles. Using Safari it links directly to your Amazon account, offering a choice of over 400,000 books, and allows you to download sample chapters before you buy.

Kindle has one of the most appealing interfaces- they’ve recognised that swiping seems to be the most intuitive way of turning a page, a feature which some developers have criminally failed to include.

As far as features go, it sticks to the basics, with the ability to bookmark pages, search text, and change the font size and colour. As a basic eReader, Kindle does the trick nicely without many frills attached.


App: iFlow | Developer: BeamItDown | Rating: 2/5
Produced by one of the lesser known developers in the field, iFlow apps come as individual books or collections. So rather than having your library stored together under one neat icon, each title takes up its own space on your browser.

Furthermore, the iFlow range is rather limited, covering primarily classics, and educational texts (philosophy, psychology, etc.). What the iFlow reader does have in its corner, however, is its unique interface.

Utilising the accelerometer, the app scrolls the text along the screen, with the degree of tilting determining the speed of the scrolling. For ease of reading, this this method is by far the most natural. I’ve already gotten through two novels…


App: Stanza | Developer: Lexcycle | Rating: 5/5
When it comes to customisation, Stanza is king. No other app offers the sheer range of options to make your reading experience exactly the way you want it. As well as the basics, Stanza goes a step further- offering almost as much options as a word processor.

Don’t like the line spacing? You can change it. Margins irritating you? No Problem. The somewhat frustrating problem of automatic page rotation is dealt with (why Apple never considered that someone would look at their iPhone while lying down is beyond me), with the ability to lock the page in landscape or portrait mode.
Social networking fans can immediately share what they’re reading through facebook or twitter via a menu of shortcuts which, of course, you can customise.

Arguably its most convenient addition is the concept of assignable hot-keys. The user can designate an action to a particular touch or movement- for example, using the classic pinch and spread motion to adjust font size.

With a wide selection enabling downloads from a variety of eBook retailers, Lexcycle seem to have covered all the bases, providing one of the best eReading apps available. (Lexcycle was acquired by Amazon in 2009)


App: Kobo | Developer: Kobo Books| Rating: 3/5
Kobo opens not with a list of names, but with a bookshelf, providing one of the most visually appealing interfaces of any reading app, and one which lends itself well to browsing multiple titles.

The experience of Kobo holds up well beyond the opening screen, with a number of ways of going from page to page. This seems to be its main area of customisation, with the other options being quite basic (font size, brightness, etc.).

In offering extra page turning options it pushes itself ahead of basic reading apps, but some of these choices are impractical to the degree that they become useless (manual scrolling??). As far as selection is concerned, Kobo fares very well, and once you’ve created a Kobo account you can purchase and download titles directly through the app itself.


App: Marvel Comics | Developer: Marvel | Rating: 4/5
While Dostoyevsky is all well and good, an occasional foray into some lighter eReading might be needed to clear the head. For those moments, there’s a wide selection of comic reading apps available, and Marvel has produced one of the snazziest.

Comics, quite simply, are amazing to read on an iPad. The screen lends itself fabulously to the images, and the technology offers a number of interesting ways to get through the story. For example, this app offers animated transitions, where the panels are displayed one by one, offering a dynamic reading experience well suited to the subject matter.

The app also capitalises on the periodical nature of comic books, offering an update service similar to podcast management, where new issues of subscribed series are automatically downloaded and added to your library. As far as the iPad is concerned, this is one area where the full potential of the medium is explored, and to great effect.


App: ibooks | Developer: Apple | Rating: 4/5
Apple’s own reading app is cosmetically appealing, offering a bookshelf interface similar to Kobo, but endeavors to offer a customisation level similar to Stanza. Unfortunately, it doesn’t quite manage to win out in either category, but provides a solid app with several interesting features nonetheless.

Its actual reading interface is one of the most appealing available, particularly when viewed on the iPad, and provides one of the most generally pleasurable reading experiences. Among its attempts at offering functions beyond the basics, iBooks offers a dictionary, accesible through double tapping a word.

While convenient, the strength of this app lies in its style, and its selection, which offers tens of thousands of titles through Apple’s iBookstore (though the selection for Ireland is currently only Public Domain works, this should change soon).

Comment & Features

Guest Column: My Business Is Your Business

The Gutter Bookshop SignOur guest columnist this week is Bob Johnston a former Hughes & Hughes buyer who left the company back in 2009 to set up his own independent bookstore. The Gutter Bookshop website can be found here and their Facebook page and Twitter stream are very active.


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:

  • As other Dublin booksellers have emphasized size and range as key marketing offers, The Gutter Bookshop would concentrate on offering a level of service not available elsewhere.
  • Local customers will be looking for quality, a fast and reliable service, along with a competitive offer and a sense of ownership.
  • Independent bookshops have become successful due to strong links with a local community, innovative offers that are not dependent on price, and by developing their ‘independent’ stance.
  • Customers should have a sense of involvement and recognition in the business.

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.

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.

Irish Top Ten

Irish Top Ten Week Ending 1/05/2010

John Connolly's The WhisperersIt has been an interesting year so far. The top ten slots are looking by my estimation (and I’d need to do some research to prove it) to be almost the preserve of genre fiction writers.

With Larsson of course leading the pack with three still in the top ten, it is nice to see John Connolly selling so well, he has after all been working the publicity circuit in Ireland very well.

It is also well worth noting the persistence of Mary O’Sullivan in the Top Ten and the arrival of Darren Shan which shows that we have produced more than one best-selling children’s and young adult fiction writer in these last few years!

1: Whisperers,The, John Connolly, 1,591
2: Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest,The, Stieg Larsson, 1,404
3: Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,The, Stieg Larsson, 1,252
4: Girl Who Played with Fire,The, Stieg Larsson, 1,010
5: Hard Girls, Martina Cole, 928
6: House Rules, Jodi Picoult, 740
7: Burned:House of Night, P.C. Cast & Kristin Cast, 735
8: Genesis, Karin Slaughter, 660
9: Thin Executioner,The, Darren Shan , 620
10: Under the Rainbow, Mary O’Sullivan, 586

Data Supplied by Nielsen BookScan taken from the Irish Consumer Market week ending 1st May 2010

Rights

Skelton & Kinsella Sell World Rights To Hay House

Sent By An AngelHay House, the global publishers of lifestyle and Self-help titles, has bought the world rights (excluding Ireland) to Kevin Skelton and Yvonne Kinsella’s Sent By An Angel which was published by Poolbeg in Ireland.

The book will be published in the UK in Spring 2011 and US and other editions will follow later in the year.

The deal was brokered by recently formed literary agency, Prizeman & Kinsella, and the acquiring editor was Hay House Managing director, Michelle Pilley.