Tag Archives: Stuart Neville

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

Fingal Launches Writing 3.0 Festival

John Banville, Stuart Neville, Nuala Ní Chonchúir and the full panel of Drivetime’s diarists; Joseph O’Connor, Olivia O’Leary and Fergus Finlay will take part in Fingal County Libraries and Fingal Arts Office newly launched festival Writing 3.0.

The festival ‘focuses on the writing process in the twenty-first century; how it evolves from the blank page across a range of interactive and ever-changing technologies associated with creativity that potentially reaches vast audiences.’

The programme also features a lecture from Dr Maurice Harmon called No Country for Old Men – WB Yeats and the Ageing Process, screen writing workshops, open mic events and an animation workshop with Cartoon Saloon, producers of Oscar-nominated film, The Secret of Kells .

The festival will also feature a session on Blogging for Fun and for Work with Irish Publishing News editor, Eoin Purcell, ward-winning bloggers, Suzy Byrne and Annie Rhiannon; journalist and blogger, Sinead Gleeson and Darren Byrne, who runs the group blog, culch.ie.

Published This Month ~ August 2010

It is an interesting selection of titles this month. September should see a rush and October a flood. Hopefully you will see something interesting in that too.


IPN Books of the month
I chose two books of the month this month for several reasons. The first because of the opening of the New Landsdowne Stadium, the second because I like to see Irish publishers publishing new fiction and to follow through from Trade Paperback to mass market paperback.


Lansdowne Road: The Stadium; the Matches; the Greatest Days
Gerard Siggins & Malachy Clerkin
9780862789107
€ 17.99 | PB | 352
The O’Brien Press
Sport | August 2010

About The Book
Lansdowne Road has long been renowned as a sacred place for international rugby and soccer. In this affectionate history, the authors lift the lid on its greatest days and nights.
From the birth of the stadium in 1873 till it closed for rebuilding in 2006, they bring to life fascinating stories such as that of the Native American lacrosse team, the brilliant athletic stars of the 1940s and 1950s, and the American Football experiment.

The triple crowns, stirring victories and memorable goals and tries that brought the crowd worldwide fame as ‘The Lansdowne Roar’ are all here, as well as the moments of comedy and tragedy that marked the life of Ireland’s oldest stadium.

If I Trust In You
Deidre Eustace
9780956016355
€ 8.99 | PB | 364pp
Hawk Hill Publishing
Fiction | August 2010

About The Book
Addy O’Driscoll has it all. Life on the south east coast of Ireland with loving husband Barry couldn’t be more idyllic. For Addy’s best friend Louise, still recovering from the loss of her first love Tom, life has been very different but will a new job and the attentions of local teacher Jim Ryan bring her happiness once again?


The Ship of Seven Murders: A True Story of Madness & Murder
Alannah & Kathy Hopkin & Bunney
9781848890367
€ 12.99 | pb | 240pp
The Collins Press
History/folklore | August 2010

About The Book
In 1828, the Mary Russell sailed into Cork Harbour from the West Indies. Seven crewmen lay in the main salon, brutally murdered by the captain. The trial was a sensation as survivors revealed a tale of danger and delusion. But what really happened? This bizarre tragedy and the dramatic court case are unravelled in this gripping account.

Green & Gold Ireland a Clean Energy World Leader?
John Travers
9781848890435
€ 14.99 | PB | 264pp
The Collins Press
Current Affairs | August 2010

About The Book
While many agree that Ireland can become a world leader in clean energy, there is little agreement on how. John Travers examines the challenge and opportunity facing Ireland. He assesses how alternatives will enable us to meet our needs, achieve energy independence, and provide an opportunity for Ireland to become a world leader and global beacon of clean energy.

The Wild Garden A new illustrated edition with photographs & notes by Charles Nelson
William Robinson
9781848890350
€ 29.99 | HB | 236pp
The Collins Press
Gardening/History | August 2010

About The Book
The Wild Garden, one of the most influential books published in the history of gardening, was first published in 1870. It challenged the prevailing formal bedding style, advocating the use of hardy perennials and annuals to provide long-lasting, self-perpetuating displays. The book has a special resonance for Irish gardens and gardeners, as Robinson is Irish and trained as a gardener in Ireland. This edition, the first published in Ireland, is augmented with captivating photographs and notes by Charles Nelson, whose introductory essay sets Robinson and his book in context.

Privilege & Poverty The Life and Times of Irish Painter & Naturalist Alexander Williams RHA 1846–1930
Gordon T. Ledbetter
9781848890343
€ 40.00 | hb | 376pp
The Collins Press
Art/Biography | August  2010

About The Book
Alexander Williams was the first artist to open the West of Ireland to a broad audience. His life was extraordinarily wide-ranging. A landscape painter, he was also an apprentice hatter, a taxidermist and a professional singer. Illustrated with a wide selection of his work, this biography illuminates the diversity of his life and times with material found nowhere else.

Missing in Action: The 50 Year Search for Ireland’s Missing Soldier
Ralph/John Riegel/O’Mahony
9781856356947
€ 14.99 | PB | 256pp
Mercier Press
Irish Military History  | August 2010

About The Book
On 15 September 1961, Trooper Patrick Mullins (18) was posted missing after a bloody ambush of an Irish UN convoy in a suburb of Elizabethville in the Katanga province of the Congo. Injured, out-gunned and out-numbered, Tpr Mullins fought with astonishing courage as he desperately tried to save his dying comrade and reach friendly lines. But after a fierce gun-fight from his crippled armoured car, Patrick Mullins was killed and his body taken as spoils of war by the tribal militia supporting the Katangan rebels. When Ireland finally ended its UN mission in the Congo and the last battalion shipped home, Tpr Mullins’ body remained buried in an unknown Congolese grave. With the 50th anniversary of his death fast approaching, the Mullins family remain caught in the terrible nightmare of maintaining an empty grave for him at the foothills of the Galtee Mountains.This fascinating book describes Tpr Mullins’ story, the struggle to find his body and the difficulties in bringing it home.

Renegades Irish Republican Women 1900-1922
Ann Matthews
9781856356848
€ 19.99 | PB | 352pp
Mercier Press
History  | August 2010

About The Book
Renegades details the tragedies, triumphs, politics and conflicts experienced by Irish women during the country’s War of Independence and Civil War. It will shock and possibly disturb any romanticised views of their role in this period of Irish history because the reality of the abuse of women within the general population by both sides in both Wars is absent in most histories of the period. But this ‘war on women’, which manifested itself in the form of physical and sexual assaults meant that many women suffered a terror that was not confined to armed conflict. The book also explores the separation of republican women during the Irish War of Independence and Civil War, into two distinct groups. Cumann na mBan members perceived their role to be purely military and so they did not engage in politics. On the other hand the political women, who by this time perceived themselves as the female political elite, were proactive in pursuit of a significant position in Irish politics, especially when the Sinn Fe?in party was reformed in October 1917.

IRA Jailbreaks 1918-1921
9781856356893
€19.99 | PB | 320pp
Mercier Press
Irish History  | August 2010

About The Book
IRA Jailbreaks 1918—1921 features the factual accounts of 25 daring rescues, rescue attempts and jailbreaks which raised the morale of nationalist Ireland and brought world-wide ridicule and discredit on the prison and internment camp systems in Britain and Ireland.  With stories of their resistence to the degrading criminal code by the political prisoners, the hunger strikes and jail riots, the savage beatings and punishments the prisoners suffered during their incarceration, their accounts offer a window on the world of the men who fought and were imprisoned during the struggle for Ireland’s independence. Here is history documented by the men who made it.

Oral and print cultures in Ireland, 1600-1900
Marc Caball/Andrew Carpenter, eds
9781846821950
€55.00 | HB | 160pp
Four Courts Press
Social History | August 2010

About The Book
In charting previously unexplored patterns of communicative practice, these essays by leading experts examine the interchange between written and verbal cultures in Ireland from the 17th century to the beginning of the 19th century.

An English-Irish lexicon of scientific and technological space-related terminology
Susan McKenna Lawlor/Damien Ó Muirí
9781846822698
€24.95 | HB | 152pp
Four Courts Press
Reference | August 2010

About The Book
This unique lexicon features over 3,500 astronautical terms, listed alphabetically in English, with their Irish translation. It is a stand-alone edition based on a twenty-language lexicon prepared by the International Academy of Astronautics on the occasion of its fiftieth anniversary in 2010. This book contains a comprehensive introductory essay, providing background information on the International Academy of Astronautics and its work to develop a multi-lingual lexicon of space-related terminology. The preface also discusses the astronomical heritage of Ireland; the Irish language; the method of translation adopted in preparing the present English-Irish lexicon; and some of the practical problems encountered in translating scientific and technical terms into Irish.

From the Viking word-hoard A dictionary of Scandinavian words in the languages of Britain and Ireland
Diarmaid Ó Muirithe
9781846821738
€50.00 | HB | 352pp
Four Courts Press
Reference | August 2010

About The Book
At the beginning of the 9th century the growing population of the three great branches of the Scandinavian race who people the countries abutting the Baltic – the Norsemen or Northmen, the Swedes and Danes – began a great outward movement which was caused both by political changes and their enterprising nature. Thus the 9th century came to be known as the Age of the Vikings, Víkinga-Öld. The Danish emigration directed its course to the north-east of England. The second migration was Norse, whose settlers gradually peopled the coasts of Ireland, northern Scotland and the Isle of Man. They left a lasting linguistic heritage. This book is a glossary of words in the various language of Britain and Ireland which owe their origin to the intrepid raiders and merchants of Scandinavia.

The Dublin region in the Middle Ages Settlement, land-use and economy
Margaret/Michael Murphy/Potterton
9781846822667
€50.00 | HB | 608pp
Four Courts Press
Geography | August 2010

About The Book
This is the first major publication of the Discovery Programme’s Medieval Rural Settlement Project. The book is a study of the medieval region that contained and was defined by the presence of Ireland’s largest nucleated settlement. Combining documentary and archaeological data this volume explores the primary settlement features of the hinterland area (all of Co. Dublin and large parts of Kildare, Meath and Wicklow), including defensive monuments, manors, the church and the Pale. It examines the way s in which resources of the region were managed and exploited to produce food, fuel and raw materials for both town and country, and investigates the processing of the raw materials for human consumption. Then as now, the city profoundly affected its surrounding area through its demands for resources and through the ownership of land by Dubliners and the control of trade by city merchants. In addition to presenting a timely examination of urban-rural interaction, the volume contributes to wider debates on topics such as settlement landscapes, the role of lordship and the productivity of agriculture.

Pieces of My Heart
Sinéad Moriarty
9781844881512
€ 15.99 | TPB | 448pp
Penguin Ireland
Fiction | August 2010

About The Book
Ava is a wife, lover, mother, daughter, friend, fixer, boss … so many different people, in fact, she no longer knows what it means to be herself …

http://www.penguin.co.uk/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9781844881512,00.html?strSrchSql=Pieces+of+My+Heart%2A/Pieces_of_My_Heart_Sinead_Moriarty

Mini Scientist in the Garden
Lisa Burke
9781405356190
€ 9.99 | HB | 24pp
DK
Children’s Non-Fiction | August 2010

About The Book
Fun experiments in the garden for mini scientists

Mini Scientist in the Kitchen
Lisa Burke
9781405356183
€ 9.99 | HB | 24pp
DK
Children’s Non-Fiction | August 2010

About The Book
Fun experiments in the kitchen for mini scientists

Collusion
Stuart Neville
9781846552809
£12.99 | TPB | 368pp
Harvil Secker
Fiction | August 2010

About The Book
A fast-paced thriller about duty and revenge, Collusion is the blistering sequel to The Twelve, one of the most highly acclaimed debuts of recent years.

Lansdowne Through The Years
Edward Newman
9781444711370
£13.99 | TPB | 320pp
Hachette Ireland
Sport | August 2010

About The Book
Accompanied by evocative photographs, these recollections provide the perfect record of Irish rugby’s greatest days and greatest deeds to commemorate the opening of the new Aviva Stadium.

Kicking On
Dave Hannigan
9781847171894
€ 7.99 | PB | 192pp
The O’Brien Press
Children’s Fiction | August 2010

About The Book
Latest in the hugely popular sports fiction series from O’Brien Press, with authentic GAA match action and adventures on and off the field, the first children’s book by well-known sports journalist Dave Hannigan, Age 9+

Vet among the Pigeons
Gillian Hick
9781847172082
€ 11.99 | PB | 256pp
The O’Brien Press
Memoir | August 2010

About The Book
More hilarious true-life tales from Wicklow vet Gillian Hick, following on from the success of Vet  the Loose.

Stuart Neville Wins A Los Angeles Times Book Prize

LA Times Book Prize LogoNorther Irish writer, Stuart Neville has won a Los Angles Times Book Prize in the Mystery / Thriller category for his novel, Ghosts Of Belfast (Published as The Twelve in the UK & Ireland).

He beat off competition from Megan Abbott, David Ellis, Attica Locke (recently nominated for the Orange Book prize) and Val McDermid.

The full list of category winners are below:

Biography: Linda Gordon, Dorothea Lange: A Life Beyond Limits
Current Interest: Dave Eggers, Zeitoun
Fiction: Rafael Yglesias, A Happy Marriage
Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction: Philipp Meyer, American Rust
Graphic Novel: David Mazzucchelli, Asterios Polyp
History: Kevin Starr, Golden Dreams: California in an Age of Abundance 1950 – 1963
Mystery/Thriller: Stuart Neville, The Ghosts of Belfast
Poetry: Brenda Hillman, Practical Water
Science and Technology: Graham Farmelo, The Strangest Man: The Hidden Life of Paul Dirac, Mystic of the Atom
Young Adult Literature: Elizabeth Partridge, Marching for Freedom: Walk Together Children and Don’t You Grow Weary
Robert Kirsch Award: Evan S. Connell
Innovator’s Award: Dave Eggers

Daily Links 13/04/2010

A somewhat delayed Daily Links, service will return, hopefully uninterrupted!
Editor

The Impending Press Release
Nice note on press releases!
Read more…

Defendini to Join Open Road Integrated Media
Defendini was pretty central to building the exemplar of niche communities, tor.com, this is an interesting move.
Read more…

An Introduction to QUEEN OF THE HILL by STUART NEVILLE
Read more…

Fiction – The Dead Republic
The Tribune does NOT like The Dead Republic
Read more…

New Irish Writing – Hennessy X.0 shortlist 2009
The Tribune shares notes on each of the Hennessy X.O. Literary Award nominees
Read more…

Irish Times iPhone app
An app from the Irish Times eh?
Read more…

Vote for these Northern Irish authors
Lots of Nothern Irish writing news.
Read more…

Is Print a Subsidiary Right?
If this doesn’t scare publishers, I don’t know what will!
Read more…

Minority report
Interesting book!
Read more…

Grimy crime tale set in grim times
Arlene Hunt profile
Read more…

Reeling in the Charlton years
Read more…

Book review: Where the love gets in
Tara Heavey reveiw
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Is this Ireland’s answer to john the baptist . . .?
Who was John Waters preparing the way for then?
Read more…

I love my bed!
Much sympathy with this book today!
Read more…

Cashel: Easter events for children
You know what, Tipperary Libraries are very active!
Read more…

Motoko Rich: It’s The Economy, Stupid!
Agree with this sentiment!
Read more…

PA applauds the passing of the Digital Economy Bill
I’m deeply suspicious of this bill in many ways. I expect “UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES”
Read more

Stuart Neville's Ghosts Of Belfast Nominated For LA Times Book Prizes

Northern Irish writer Stuart Neville‘s The Ghosts Of Belfast/The Twelve has been nomiated for an LA Times Book Prize award in the Mystery/Thriller category.

The finalist in the section are:

    “Bury Me Deep” by Megan Abbott
    “The Hidden Man” by David Ellis
    “Black Water Rising” by Attica Locke
    “A Darker Domain” by Val McDermid
    “The Ghosts of Belfast” by Stuart Neville

For a full list of finalists ion all categories, read the article and view the listing.