Tag Archives: The Guardian

Briefly Noted | Amazon founder heads digital advance on Guardian books power list | Books | guardian.co.uk

Seismic shifts in the publishing world, transforming the way we buy and read books, have propelled Amazon’s chief executive Jeff Bezos into the number one slot of the Guardian and Observer’s Books 100 Power List.

According to Lisa Allardice, the editor of Guardian Review, “Amazon has given readers a limitless choice of books in a way that no bookseller or publisher has ever done before. It has dealt the high-street bookshop a near-fatal battering, completely changing not only the way we buy books, but also the way we read them, as the huge success of the Kindle shows.”

via Amazon founder heads digital advance on Guardian books power list | Books | guardian.co.uk.

Roddy Doyle: A life in writing

This Article originally appeared in the Guardian.


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Roddy Doyle: A life in writing” was written by Sarah Crown, for The Guardian on Sunday 17th April 2011 23.05 UTC

The first book written by Dublin’s latest literary star had nothing to do with his home city at all. A sprawling state-of-the-nation saga, promisingly titled Your Granny Is a Hunger Striker, it languishes these days in his archive in the National Library, doomed to remain unread. “It’s never been published and it never will be,” Roddy Doyle says now, nearly 30 years after he wrote it. “Because it’s utter shite. I sent it to every agent and publisher I could find – and either it wasn’t coming back, or it was coming back unopened. There’s nothing at all in it of the area I grew up in. It’s absent.”

He didn’t make the same mistake twice. “Paul Mercier [the playwright] was teaching in the same school as me at the time; he was writing these plays set in working-class Dublin, and they were brilliant. He shoved me in the right direction. In the winter of 1986 I started writing the book that became The Commitments, and it’s riddled with the place I come from. It made me realise the area’s worth writing about. Anything you want – love stories, murders, whatever – can be written in these few streets.”

Doyle grew up in Kilbarrack, a straggle of shops and houses on Dublin’s fringes. It resurfaces in his novels as Barrytown, the name lifted from a 1974 Steely Dan song: Doyle, like Jimmy Rabbitte, hero of The Commitments, knows his music. These days, Doyle’s name is better known than the official one; he recounts tales of taxi drivers who’ve made a mint out of people demanding to be taken to see it. “I suppose it was a defence, to a degree,” he says of the decision to rename it. “If I’d called it Kilbarrack it would’ve been restricting. There’s a pub there, for example, that’s not 100 miles from the pub in The Snapper and The Van [the second and third volumes of his Barrytown trilogy], but the point is meant to be that it could be any pub on the outskirts of Dublin. Changing the name gave me freedom.”

It also served to derail any search for real-life counterparts of the hyper-ordinary men and women who shuttle through his pages. Doyle’s novels, particularly the earlier ones, are fundamentally exercises in people watching. Nothing much happens; in fact, the books are remarkable for their unremarkability: the three Barrytown novels can be summarised, respectively, as “kids form a band then split up”, “girl accidentally gets pregnant and has the baby” and “man loses his job and runs a chip van with his mate”. Their urgency lies rather in the psychological realism Doyle brings to his characters’ responses to their commonplace dramas, the sympathetic warmth with which he paints their unexceptional lives.

This sympathy is particularly evident in Doyle’s latest story collection, Bullfighting. Once again, the substance of the stories – middle-aged men, coping, or failing to, with decline – is mundane; once again, the remarkable thing about them is the compassion with which Doyle, 52, treats his protagonists. While he invokes all the usual signifiers – the hair loss, the cancer scares – customarily reached for when writing about men whose lives have passed their highwater mark, he nevertheless permits his heroes to be happy. These are men who love their wives, by and large; who take their physical failings more or less in their stride. The one thing they appear unable to accommodate, however, is unemployment. Several of the stories were written in the wake of the Irish bailout, and over them the shadow of the scrapheap looms. “It’s happening anyway,” Doyle says of the crash. “Why wouldn’t you write about it?”

The peaks and troughs of the past half-century have given Doyle plenty to write about; in fact, if you’re looking for a primer of contemporary Irish history, you could do worse than start with his novels. His latest collection paints a picture of life in Ireland after the death of the Celtic tiger, the Barrytown trilogy documents the recession of the 80s and early 90s, and his short-story collection on economic immigrants, The Deportees, gives a flavour of the boom-time in between. His Booker prizewinning novel, Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha, meanwhile, marks the moment where it all began: the 1960s, when Dublin was in the grip of its first wave of expansion fever. The book charts a year in the life of its 10-year-old narrator, Patrick, in a spatter of impressionistic episodes, all told in childhood’s endless present tense, in which the passage of time is conveyed only by encroaching construction works and the gathering cloud of his parents’ collapsing marriage. Doyle himself, born in 1958, is the same age as Paddy. While he’s adamant the book isn’t autobiographical (“My mother, who’s more qualified to answer the question, doesn’t see me in it at all”), incidents from his own childhood punctuate the text. And Doyle and his narrator share something unique to mid-20th-century children: a sense of being neither too early nor too late, of the world keeping pace with their own progress.

“When I was born, Kilbarrack was right on the edge of Dublin – city on one side, fields on the other,” Doyle says. “But as I was growing up, the city corporation bought up the farmland and started building. From when I was eight or nine right into my teens, it seemed like the whole place was a permanent building site, changing as I changed. In retrospect it sounds a bit neat and tidy, but it really was like that. And it wasn’t just me, it was the whole country. Modernity was coming up the road as the cement was drying.”

Perhaps the pace of change at home explains why he never felt the need to leave. After graduating from University College Dublin, he fell into teaching and ended up at Greendale Community School, round the corner from the house he grew up in. Going back there allowed him to perceive it with a freshness that would serve him well when it made its way into his work. “It really opened my eyes to the place,” he says now, “though I wasn’t thinking of it in terms of writing. It was a good few years before I saw it as material.”

After the cul-de-sac of Your Granny Is a Hunger Striker, the books began to flow. The Commitments, which Doyle published through a company he set up for the purpose before Heinemann snapped it up, was a cult hit; the 1991 film version a mainstream one. The other Barrytown novels spawned films of their own, and The Van garnered an unexpected Booker shortlisting. But it was Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha that forced the gear change. Doyle’s freewheeling depiction of a Dublin childhood achieved moderate popular acclaim on publication, but its triumph at the Booker in 1993 turned Doyle into a bona fide phenomenon. The book sat at number one on the Irish bestseller list for a year; at one point, his first three books were also in the top five. Doyle was feted by an eager press as working-class Dublin’s jaunty laureate – though anyone who cared to take a close look at his books might have noted that despite the earthy humour, their emotional trajectory, from the romp of The Commitments to Paddy Clarke’s disintegrating ending, was firmly downward. “It was a strange thing,” Doyle says. “Suddenly there were requests to turn up to Irish Man of the Year, photo opportunities with the horse who won the Melbourne Gold Cup, because we’d both brought glory to our country! Until Family came out.”

Throughout the Paddy Clarke brouhaha, Doyle had been quietly plugging away at a four-part BBC/RTE series that painted a very different picture of his city. The title sequence, in which dirty blocks of flats loom out of the mist
like sea cliffs, panned over a Dublin that wasn’t just poor, but grey, defeated. Each episode focused on a different member of the Spencer family – Charlo, smalltime crook and abusive husband, troubled teenager John Paul, Nicola, whose relationship with her father is slipping into turbulent waters, and Paula, Charlo’s battered, broken wife. In the Barrytown trilogy, family sat solidly at the books’ heart – knotty, certainly, but cherished, relied upon; in Paddy Clarke, although the story is one of familial breakdown, the institution itself is never questioned. In Family, however, the drama derives directly from the flaws and fissures within the unit, its fatal warping. The interactions between its members are joyless, alcohol-fuelled and destructive; the collective loyalty that sustained the characters in the earlier novels is gone.

“It caused a storm,” Doyle says, with something between a grimace and a grin. “The first episode was broadcast in Ireland in May 1994, a few days after the Eurovision Song Contest. What was significant about this particular Eurovision was that it unleashed Riverdance, this Vegas version of our culture. I’m not kidding: it was a major moment for Ireland. The country was sexy for the first time since St Patrick came over and brought his fuckin’ Christianity with him. And Family was on four days later. People said, ‘Ah, just when we were feeling good about ourselves . . .’”

The repercussions were beyond anything he could have imagined. Doyle went overnight from Ireland’s darling to national pariah. “The celebrity status that attached to me when I won the Booker, invitations to open supermarkets and all that shite – it stopped the day Family was broadcast. There were accusations that I was suggesting this was normal working-class life, that I was undermining marriage. I was the subject of sermons, editorials, political programmes on TV. I got death threats. It was a very unsettling time, especially with two small children.” (Doyle married his wife Belinda in 1989; the couple have two sons and a daughter.) “I knew what I was writing, and I was proud of it, but I didn’t know it would have such consequences.”

While the controversy triggered by the series continued to rage, Doyle holed up to spend more time with Family‘s most complicated, compromised character. “When I was writing the final episode, Paula’s episode, I found myself wondering about her. What was she like as a kid? How did she meet Charlo? Why – that almost accusatory question we ask of people who’ve been in bad relationships – did she marry him? And I thought, there’s a book there.”

There was – but it turned out to be the most difficult thing he’d ever attempted. The Woman Who Walked Into Doors took the character of Paula Spencer – alcoholic, careening, desperate but still stubbornly clinging to her life – and produced a bleak, brave book that is widely held to be his finest creation. “Writing an alcoholic woman was hard,” he says. “Biology and circumstances put me a long way from her. It was a very slow piece of work at first. It took me a long time to get the register. Then in the second year, it began to click. Chapter 25, the longest one, the emotional heart of the book – it took just two days to write; it flowed out of me. By that point, I knew exactly what I wanted to do.”

In chapter 25, Paula recalls the first time Charlo hit her, when she was pregnant with their first child. “I fell,” Paula says, “He felled me. I’m looking at it now. Twenty years later. I wouldn’t do what he wanted, he was in his moods, I was being smart, he hated me being pregnant, I wasn’t his little Paula anymore – and he drew his fist back and he hit me. He hit me. Before he knew it? He drew his own fist back, not me. He aimed at me. He let go. He hit me. He wanted to hurt me. And he did. And he did more than that.” The stiff, fractured sentences and hammering repetitions convey the brutality of Paula’s marriage, and the mental excisions she has had to perform to survive it. “It is the triumph of the novel,” Mary Gordon wrote in the New York Times Book Review, “that Mr Doyle – entirely without condescension – shows the inner life of this battered housecleaner to be the same stuff as that of the heroes of the great novels of Europe.”

The novel transmuted the undifferentiated clamour that greeted Family into serious, respectful admiration. It also gave Doyle the freedom and confidence to embark on his most technically ambitious project yet. His writing had always been of the here and now; in the case of Family pressingly so. But his next excursion took him all the way back in time to the birth of modern Ireland. His hero, Henry Smart – street-thug turned IRA poster boy – proves a prickly, slippery guide to the Irish century, ducking and weaving his way through the history of the republican movement, from the clean fury of the Easter Rising to the 1970s’ churn of backstabbing and internal politics, over the course of three volumes that became known collectively as The Last Roundup trilogy.

“It was a very exciting thing to do,” he says of his trawl through his country’s backstory. “My grandfathers had both been . . . ‘involved’, the word is, with the republicans. So it was there in the house, if you like; it was in the air. A tiny fragment of the population believed they’d inherited the chalice from the leaders of the 1916 rising. So strapping a bomb to a taxi driver and making him drive to a checkpoint, or kneecapping a kid, or whatever it was, was in the name of Ireland and therefore right. I knew I’d enjoy delving into that. And that notion of poking fun at republicans has always been there, too. When I was in secondary school and the Christian Brothers were getting teary-eyed talking about the men who died for Ireland, we’d all be whispering, ‘Blow it out yer arse, brother’. The books were just doing that in a more disciplined way. It was a nice job.”

Now, though, with Bullfighting published, Doyle is returning to familiar territory. “I’m actually writing about Jimmy Rabbitte again, as a man in his mid-40s. I thought it’d be interesting to see how he perceived the world today: he went through the recession, married and had children during the boom, and now everything’s gone belly up. Three years ago, when the crash kicked in, I found the immediate nostalgia a bit sickening. The radio jumped straight on the 80s soundtrack, and there was a lot of gleeful nonsense about how we’d become too materialistic, as if it was somehow a good thing we were sinking into this mush. And I thought to myself, Jimmy’d be a good guide. A dreamer, but at the same time very down to earth, for want of a better cliché.”

After nine novels and almost three decades, Doyle is back where he started. Although, of course, he’s never really been away.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010

Published via the Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress.

Briefly Noted | James Frey ignores publishing houses to release new book through art gallery | Books | The Guardian

Frey’s original manuscript will be printed on canvas and displayed by the publisher, the Gagosian gallery in New York, alongside new artworks by several top American artists to illustrate it. They include Richard Prince, Ed Ruscha, Richard Phillips and Terry Richardson.

For those not able to afford the $150 (£93) price tag for the collectors’ edition, Frey is also self-publishing his work directly as an ebook through Kindles, iPads, Nooks and eReaders. The bad news for the folks at Harper Collins, Random House and other big imprints is that, amid these new-fangled outlets, there isn’t a publishing house in sight.

via James Frey ignores publishing houses to release new book through art gallery | Books | The Guardian.

Briefly Noted | Make way for the new in the book world | Peter Preston | Comment is free | The Guardian

Nobody, setting up such public provision now, would dream of building and stocking conventional libraries the length and breadth of the land (least of all in clusters of five). “As pensioners, do we really need computers?” asked a 75-year-old and 86-year-old in Saturday’s Guardian. Yes, said a librarian, who “spends a lot of my time teaching people of all ages” the internet. Yes, said a bed-ridden 69-year-old, who orders her books on an Apple. Yes, said a 40-year-old from Cumbria because “you probably can’t imagine how little the younger generation use their local libraries”. And the point, however unwelcome, is that time and infinite possibilities are passing Andrew Carnegie’s legacy by. We can’t embrace something fresh without leaving older ways behind.

via Make way for the new in the book world | Peter Preston | Comment is free | The Guardian.

Guest Column: Ray Connolly: What Happened Next

‘So, how did you get on putting your book online?’ That’s what I get asked quite a lot these days, a reference to how in August I began serialising my latest novel, The Sandman, free on my website. A thriller about music, social networking sites and cults, I reckoned it fitted the moment.

Well, so far I think I’ve been proved right, largely, I must confess, since the Guardian published a piece I wrote outlining what I was doing and how publishing was changing. Until then my website had been attracting no more than 150 readers a day, but on the day the article appeared it got an astonishing 50,056 hits. Eureka!

Naturally the level of online traffic levelled off after a hectic week, but it never dropped to fewer than two and a half to three thousand visitors a day until the serialisation ended in mid-October. Since then the figures have returned to a regular couple of dozen more than where they were before it began.

Now, in terms of book sales a following of maybe a couple of thousand isn’t huge – although many a hardback novel struggles to sell a thousand copies these days. And it was interesting that when offered the choice between downloading the entire book immediately for £4.99 or reading the free serialisation, the serial won hands down. Readers clearly didn’t want to pay for instant access if they could get it for nothing as a drip-feed.

But most interesting was the geographical breadth of The Sandman’s readership. Obviously the greatest following came from the UK and the US, but there were also many readers in Russia, Japan, Australia, the Scandinavian countries and Germany, France and Switzerland – twenty-five countries in all. What was really surprising was to find people downloading the entire book chapter by chapter in Moldova and Ukraine. I hadn’t expected that.

I’m not a techie but over the last few months I’ve learned how to trace IP addresses, and the idea that someone is following my novel on his or her computer in the Carpathians does give a certain buzz.

My great worry when I began was that people would read the first few chapters and then miss and episode or two and lose interest. I’m sure that happened in some cases, but many readers stayed with the book, quite a few of whom, I worked out, were reading the chapters every morning at work.

I could almost set my watch by the time readers came to the website in the Lancashire County Council offices in Preston and the UCL department of medical physics and bioengineering, before, as the day wore on, regulars logged on to the latest episode in New York and Washington, later in Texas and Chicago, and, towards the end of my working London day, in California.

Having given the stragglers several weeks to catch up with the final chapters, the free The Sandman is no longer available on my website. I’ve now put it on Amazon’s Kindle, which means it can be bought and read anywhere in the world on Kindles, iPads, iPhones, BlackBerries and almost any Android device, as well as on computers. There’s been some interest from TV, too. We’ll see.

Like other authors whom, I now hear, are putting their books online, I would obviously have preferred it if a big publisher had snapped it up, given me an advance, sold foreign rights, put The Sandman into the shops, advertised it and got it reviewed in newspapers.  Because, although it’s now relatively simple to put a novel online, without a publisher’s marketing force it isn’t easy to let the world know about it.

But it didn’t happen. And now, as agents continue to struggle to sell fiction to publishers, things are changing on an accelerating basis. This Christmas millions are being spent on persuading us to buy easy-to-read electronic devices like Kindle and iTab, and with more digital books said to have been sold in the US this year than hardbacks we can all see that a publishing revolution is on us. Just this week Google launched its Google eBooks website in opposition to Amazon and Apple.

I don’t for a minute think the reader will be forced any time soon to choose between digital and print. Surely the future points to the two co-existing alongside each other. But for the writer it means a new avenue of communication has been opened.

Where any of this leaves The Sandman, I really don’t know. But it’s fun to be in at the start of something new.

*************

Ray Connolly is the author of fourteen books, including Shadows On A Wall and a short biography of John Lennon, the screenplays for the movies That’ll Be The Day and Stardust, the TV series Lytton’s Diary and Perfect Scoundrels, and several radio plays and short stories. He also wrote and directed a documentary on James Dean and worked with Sir Gorge Martin on a three-part BBC series about music, The Rhythm of Life. As a journalist he first became widely known for his interviews with the Beatles and other rock icons and more recently for his articles on popular culture. His latest novel,The Sandman, is now available as an eBook from Kindle on Amazon.

Briefly Noted | Why celebrity memoirs rule publishing | Books | The Guardian

Has he read any of the big Christmas sellers? “I’m reading the Keith Richards book,” he says. “I’m eking that one out, because it’s brilliant. I’ve read some of the Russell Brand, which is good fun. I’ve read about half of the Stephen Fry book. I’ve got quite a few books on the go.”

I reveal how I’ve spent the last couple of weeks, and mention them all: Minogue, McIntyre, Cole, Boyle, Evans, Pegg, O’Grady, Brand, Wan, Sugar and the meerkat.

“You’ve even done the meerkat,” he marvels. “That’s above and beyond the call of duty.” A Simples Life, he tells me, took people such as him by surprise.

“How do you judge how well a book based on a fake animal in a car insurance ad is going to do?” he marvels, and then delivers his version of an inescapable truth about capitalism. As Paul Weller once sang, the public gets what the public wants – so maybe jumped-up pseuds like me should leave them to it.

“That book is doing well,” he says. “People like it.” He says the next bit with slightly less cheer. “Merry Christmas to them.”

via Why celebrity memoirs rule publishing | Books | The Guardian.

Daily Links 21/09/2010

Milk & Cookies from Cian Brennan on Vimeo.

Milk and cookies at Exchange Dublin on the 14th of September.

(HT @darraghdoyle)
Milk and Cookie Stories is a non-profit storytelling group based in Dublin, Ireland. We’re looking to find out what stories our city has to tell.

Storytelling, though very much a thriving art form, is rarely the focus of any event or performance. We believe that storytelling deserves to be placed in the spotlight. Dublin needs a place for people to come to hear a good story, and maybe tell one – we aim to provide that place.

Milk and Cookies isn’t just for writers and performers – we would like anyone who has a tale to tell, or wants to hear a story told well, to have a warm, relaxed environment to do just that. Dublin needs a place for people to eat to hear a good story, and maybe tell one. A place with tea, cushions, cookies and friends.


Hachette e-books removed from Waterstone’s, WHS, and Book Depository
There’s trouble ahead, and the news, though seemingly interesting, may not be good for Irish Publishers.
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Micheál MacLiammóir & Culture Night 2010
I swear, these get even more beautiful every time he posts!
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Spending on UK books passes £1bn-two weeks late
Book sales down 3.4% on 2009 in the UK!
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Fingal’s Annual Writers’ Festival
I’ll be on the Blogging panel, overall a very fine festival
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Sunday Tribune Book Club
Is there a national paper without a book club now?
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Paperbacks Tom Widger
Includes a short rerview of The Downfall of The Spanish Armada in Ireland
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Unlocking a mother’s love
Another ROOM review
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Culture Night reading by Galway Writers at Charlie Byrne’s Bookshop
Nice idea for culture night
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Review: Homecoming by Cathy Kelly
Great Review for Cathy Kelly’s latest
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Deirdre Sullivan launches Prim Improper
Some great pics from New Island’s Prim Improper launch
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January, February, March, March, March
Nice review for Blood & Thunder by Darach MacDonald
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Magical writer casts his spell
Decent review for Landy this one!
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On the trail of the killers
Good old Declan Burke gets stuck into some crime
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The more things change . . .
Tom Garvin’s latests gets a review
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Emma Donoghue Booker nominee
Emma Donoghue author of the Man Booker shortlisted Room Saturday 9th October 2010 at 1pm Edmund Burke Theatre, Trinity College entrance off Nassau St) Admission free. Booking: 01 674 4873 Email: dublinpubliclibraries@dublincity.ie
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Friends of the earth
LITERARY CRITICISM: Out of the Earth: Ecocritical Readings of Irish Texts Edited by Christine Cusick Cork University Press,
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Go Read This | Hachette UK to set e-book prices from Monday | theBookseller.com
Hello Agency pricing, bye bye cheap ebooks?
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Rambo writer David Morrell launches latest thriller as ebook exclusive
This is big news
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Fry says bookshops could go the way of blacksmiths
Everyone seems to have it in for bookstores these days, though at Mountains To Sea last weekend, Tim Waterstone seemed clear they’d survive.
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The Blair Reaction Round Up

Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair (C) leaves Eason bookstore in Dublin, Ireland September 4, 2010. Three people were arrested when protesters threw eggs and shoes at former British Prime Minister Tony Blair when he arrived to sign copies of his memoir at a bookshop in Dublin on Saturday, national broadcaster RTE said.   REUTERS/David Moir (IRELAND - Tags: CIVIL UNREST POLITICS SOCIETY)Tony Blair was in Eason on O’Connell Street Saturday 4th September 2010 to sign copies of his autobiography, A Journey. His visit prompted tight security and things didn’t go entirely smoothly.

The Irish Independent reported that:

There were violent scuffles between protesters and gardai in O’Connell Street, Dublin, yesterday during former British prime minister Tony Blair’s controversial book signing event.

Shoes and eggs were thrown by the crowd at his car as he arrived to sign copies of his memoir, A Journey, at Eason’s flagship bookstore beside the GPO.

The missiles, thrown by anti-war protesters, who numbered no more than 200, did not hit Mr Blair as he arrived at the venue shortly before 11am. The poor weather greatly reduced the risk of widespread trouble.

Four people were arrested as activists clashed with gardai during the demonstrations before midday. The four were charged with minor public order offences and later released from custody.

The Irish Times gave further details on those arrested:

Four men were arrested following a protest in Dublin city centre yesterday morning where former British prime minister Tony Blair held a public book signing, the first since his memoirs were released this week.

The four, two aged in their late teens and two aged in their 30s, were taken to Store Street Garda station where they were charged with public order offences and released. They are due to appear in court on September 30th.

On a more thematic note The Guardian reported:

Some were determined in Dublin that these glass walls should be broken down; a few protesters even went to the trouble of queueing to make their judgments on his book in person. Kate O’Sullivan, a 24-year-old from Cork, and a member of the “Irish Palestinian Solidarity Movement”, got past the concentric rings of security that involved Garda and Special Branch and Emergency Response Units, and while Blair scribbled his signature informed him: “Mr Blair I am here to make a citizen’s arrest for the war crimes you have committed.” She was dragged away, she said, by five security people.

The day before, Blair appeared on RTÉ’s Late Late show with Ryan Tubridy for his first live interview since releasing the book:

Tony Blair On The Late Late Show

Daily Links 18/08/2010


Review of The Scarecrow by Michael Connelly (Orion, 2009)
Nice review!
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Cló Morainn Covers
Nice post again!
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The economics of political memoirs
Interesting note on Political memoirs in the Uk and their sales!
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I Am Number Four – Pittacus Lore
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WH Smith slashes prices as e-book war intensifies
It’s getting hot and heavy there in ebooks!
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Smarter Than The Average Alec
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CALL ME ‘WRITER’ NOT ‘POET’, PLEASE
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James Joyce, Samuel Beckett and Walt Whitman are a girl’s best friend
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The Life of a Full Time Writer – yep, that would be moi!
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Room
Nice review of Room from Raven Books
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Lennon takes the lead
Rampaging ex-paramilitaries, undercover cops and the return of familiar serial killers – there’s lots out there for lovers of the crime genre, writes DECLAN BURKE  
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Review: Girl In A Spin by Clodagh Murphy
Write what you know, they say, but Dublin author Clodagh Murphy has broken the rule and set her second novel in the world of British politics.
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The Temple House Festival – Music & The Arts
Was there for No Place Like Dome, smashing grounds.
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Go Read This | Author Ray Connolly explains why he is publishing his latest novel chapter by chapter, online | Books | The Guardian
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Panel Picking: SXSW 2011
It thrills me that the book community is actively participating in the South by Southwest Interactive festival.
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Movie adaptation – No Country for Old Men
I loved the book, just loved it! Aint seen the movie yet.
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Armouron Toys Hit the Shelves
Go Oisín
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More Concerns about Australia/New Zealand Bookselling Giant; McNally Jackson Still Waiting for Espresso to Brew
Bookstores in crisis everywhere it seems
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Learning some things at dinner in Sao Paolo
Fascinating post from Mike Sjatzkin
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Testing The Guardian News Feed Plugin

Don’t be alarmed if over the next week or so, articles from The Guardian begin to appear on site.

Irish Publishing News is testing The Guardian News Feed plugin for WordPress, which enabled the site to pull in items from The Guardian’s extensive content library.

In fact, the first fruits of this test are now live.

Eoin Purcell
Editor, Irish Publishing News