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Literati bugs

The white invitation simply announced that "You are invited to The Penguin Roadshow," along with details of time and place

Sat Jun 03 2000 - 01:00

Genius on a plate

This is a tale of two meals

Sat Jun 03 2000 - 01:00

An Irishwoman's Diary

Ever since Eve gave Adam that memorable apple, women have been tempting men with exciting things to eat

Fri Jun 02 2000 - 01:00

On the Spine of Italy: A Year in the Abruzzi by Harry Clifton (Pan £6.99 UK)

Harry Clifton will be known to many as a poet, and his first book of prose bears the traces of the poet's eye for detail

Sat May 27 2000 - 01:00

Feeding the multitudes

Do you get into a bit of a flap when you have a few folks coming round for dinner? Well, how would you feel about making lunch…

Sat May 27 2000 - 01:00

Bruce Chatwin by Nicholas Shakespeare (Vintage £7.99 in UK)

In his life, work, and sexuality, writer Bruce Chatwin continually reinvented himself

Sat May 13 2000 - 01:00

The problems of growing up and the joys of growing old (Part 2)

At the beginning of this novel, Japanese-raised Franklin Hata is lucky to escape death by fire in his own house, much coveted…

Sat May 06 2000 - 01:00

The Modern Library: The 200 Best Novels in English since 1950, by Carmen Callil and Colm Toibin (Picador £5.99 in UK)

The criteria for this book was fiction - not all novels, despite what the title declares - published in English since 1950, as…

Sat Apr 29 2000 - 01:00

Memories of a Catholic Girlhood by Mary McCarthy (Vintage at £6.99 in UK)

"The temptation to invent has been very strong, particularly where recollection is hazy and I remember the substance of an event…

Sat Apr 22 2000 - 01:00

Back on the rights track

The consumer programme Streetwise is coming back, a different programme in all but name

Sat Apr 15 2000 - 01:00

Any old `Iron', `Bins', `Glass', `Tyres', `Sawmills'

This is a book of stories which are connected by the theme of work and workmen's tools, hence titles such as `Bins', `Iron', `…

Sat Apr 01 2000 - 01:00

Early Modern Women's Writing: An Anthology 1560-1700 edited by Paul Salzman (Oxford University Press, £7.99 in UK)

The educated women of the late middle ages wrote prodigious numbers of letters, journals and memoirs

Sat Apr 01 2000 - 01:00

Kids in the kitchen

A couple of Saturdays ago, two adults, one child and a baby went off to take an old car to the National Car Test Scrapyard in…

Sat Mar 18 2000 - 00:00

Paddy of the `huge presence' commemorated on canal bank

There was more than one famous Paddy having their name celebrated yesterday

Sat Mar 18 2000 - 00:00

The Map of Love by Ahdaf Soueif (Bloomsbury, £6.99 in UK)

The 1999 Booker Prize folk declared this novel to be the best "read" on the shortlist

Sat Mar 11 2000 - 00:00

Wexford pike on a bike

If there are such individuals as Pike Anoraks, Pike People is the programme for them

Sat Mar 11 2000 - 00:00

In the picture

When you think of an art gallery, what do you think of first? Sunday afternoons? Tons of gilt frames? Security guards checking…

Sat Mar 11 2000 - 00:00

Dublin novelist shortlisted for literary award

Colum McCann, a Dubliner, is one of seven novelists who have been shortlisted for the £100,000 International IMPAC Dublin Literary…

Tue Mar 07 2000 - 00:00

Cowboy country

Renting. Just a vowel away from ranting. Landlords, eh? I've known a few. Naw, scrub that, I've known a lot

Sat Feb 26 2000 - 00:00

Our Fathers by Andrew O'Hagan (Faber & Faber, £6.99 in UK)

Andrew O'Hagan's first novel rightly won a place on the 1999 Booker shortlist

Sat Feb 19 2000 - 00:00

Opening a treasure trove

On Monday, tribunals were forgotten with the opening in Dublin Castle of the Chester Beatty Library and Galleries in the refurbished…

Sat Feb 12 2000 - 00:00

Culture crashes

This is a book which comes with bags of hype

Sat Feb 12 2000 - 00:00

Full-time teen, part-time author

So what did you do in your free time when you were 12? Play football? Torture your siblings? Obsess about boy/girl bands? Have…

Sat Jan 29 2000 - 00:00

Darkness visible

Although the title of this book, Don't Read This Book If You're Stupid, might sound like it's a particularly in-your-face American…

Sat Jan 29 2000 - 00:00

Success looms

It's A mid-week morning but Avoca Handweavers, at Kilmacanogue in Co Wicklow, is fairly jammed with mammies and toddlers, and…

Sat Jan 22 2000 - 00:00

Making children of us all

Circus... like Christmas, it's usually at its most thrilling when viewed from the perspective of childhood, but with something…

Sat Jan 08 2000 - 00:00

Heeding the call of the isles

Three things about Peter Somerville-Large (70) which are useful to know

Sat Jan 08 2000 - 00:00

A bit of a two-horse race

The good ideas are always those which look perfectly obvious - once they have been done, that is

Sat Dec 18 1999 - 00:00

Leaving the sea for a life of crime

What's the first thing you think of when you hear the name "Clare Francis"? If it's the distinguished British crime writer, author…

Sat Dec 11 1999 - 00:00

Letters Home. By Fergal Keane. Penguin. 205pp. £6.99 in UK

If you liked Letter to Daniel, this new book by BBC journalist Fergal Keane, which contains much, much more of the same, is intended…

Sat Dec 04 1999 - 00:00

Cameroon With Egbert by Dervla Murphy (Flamingo, £7.99 in UK)

Dervla Murphy tends to focus so much on the territory around her when she travels that we learn a lot about it, but not much …

Sat Dec 04 1999 - 00:00

Travel

The travel book genre continues to remain on the big stage in bookshops, despite the effort of critics to elbow it into the wings…

Sat Dec 04 1999 - 00:00

Making magic

The visitor to Ceol, the traditional music centre in Smithfield, is watching a video of Martin Hayes playing the fiddle

Sat Dec 04 1999 - 00:00

Women Travel: First-hand accounts from more than 60 countries. Edited by Natania Jansz, Miranda Davies, Emma Drew, and Lori McDougall (The Rough Guides, £12.99 in UK)

This is the fourth edition of the Rough Guide's Women Travel anthology, and it weighs in now at 700 pages, with stories and reports…

Sat Nov 27 1999 - 00:00

Booking the Shelbourne

"Ah," said an American relative on a first visit to Ireland recently, as he looked skywards from streets of Dublin, "now I know…

Sat Nov 20 1999 - 00:00

Demon Barber: Interviews by Lynn Barber (Penguin, £8.99 in UK)

When the British Independent on Sunday was launched a decade ago, Lynn Barber's extended interviews with celebrities, politicians…

Sat Nov 20 1999 - 00:00

Best foot forward

You hear it before you see it: a loud pulsating thrumming that presses up against the door of the rehearsal room and sounds like…

Sat Nov 13 1999 - 00:00

Annie's women

Annie Leibovitz is one of the most famous photographers in the world: the woman who made her reputation by accompanying the Rolling…

Sat Oct 30 1999 - 01:00

Olympians with real attitude

In June this year, 77 Special Olympics athletes, together with their coaches, family members, and supporters, travelled from …

Sat Oct 23 1999 - 01:00

Theatre Festival ups and downs

Time to get up from the sitting position that theatre aficionados will have spent a lot of time in for the last few weeks, with…

Thu Oct 21 1999 - 01:00

`I always wanted to do nursing . . .'

Mary Walshe is 36, and a clinical placement co-ordinator at a large Dublin hospital. Her salary is £25,500 a year.

Sat Oct 09 1999 - 01:00

Hillen's Hinde-sight

The artist Sean Hillen doesn't walk across the room, he scampers

Sat Oct 09 1999 - 01:00

The Happy Pigs. By Lucy Harkness. The Blackstaff Press. 244pp. £7.99 in UK

The cheerful pigs of the title of Lucy Harkness's first novel refer to the infamous public nickname given to the police

Sat Oct 09 1999 - 01:00

Ten Things I Hate About . . . Flying

1. Aeroflot. Nothing you hear has been exaggerated

Thu Oct 07 1999 - 01:00

`I write first and add the research later'

I've lived in Seattle for about six years, and find that my writing day used to be a lot more rigid than it is now

Sat Oct 02 1999 - 01:00

Out of the shadows

Shadowing Hannah is Dubliner Sara Berkeley's fifth book, but her first novel

Sat Sept 25 1999 - 01:00

Terms of endearment

When documentary-maker Hilary Dully was asked to run a course for women in Connemara which focused on media and gender, she ended…

Sat Sept 25 1999 - 01:00

Three Dollars by Elliot Perlman (Faber, £6.99 in UK)

Australian Elliot Perlman's novel is all the more outstanding for being his first, and has already picked up major prizes

Sat Sept 25 1999 - 01:00

May the Force be with you

The small rural town of Templemore, with its wide market streets and outlying bungalows, looks like many other Irish towns

Sat Sept 18 1999 - 01:00

Deeply rooted in a local world

Dermot Healy's new novel is just one of a number o fprojects he has coming to fruition this autumn

Sat Sept 18 1999 - 01:00
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