Gjør som tusenvis av andre bokelskere
Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev og få rabatter og inspirasjon til din neste leseopplevelse.
Ved å abonnere godtar du vår personvernerklæring.Du kan når som helst melde deg av våre nyhetsbrev.
Superb essays on Ireland and the Balkans, considering parallels between Belfast and Sarajevo.
Avi Shlaim places Israel's policy towards the Gaza Strip under an uncompromising lens.
In this wide-ranging, stylish and iconoclastic book, the acclaimed Belfast filmmaker and BBC author Mark Cousins reflects on his prolific career in documentary-making, meditating on the philosophers, writers, actors and films that have influenced him.
This third volume of Patricia Craig's trilogy on her upbringing in Belfast and life in London.
A collection of letters written to people in positions of authority between 2008 and 2023.
A hardback reprint of the classic Irish Pages issue on Seamus Heaney to commemorate the tenth anniversary of his death on 30 August 2013. The extraordinary degree to which Heaney was a creative and ethical exemplar, mentor, and generous friend comes through especially powerfully in this book, with its 54 contributors.
In Errigal: Sacred Mountain, Cathal O'Searcaigh goes on a pilgrim path around Errigal and summons up the spirit of this revered mountain, the largest in Ireland. In his "Passages of Light", we get an insightful word-journey around a mountain that has shaped the thinking of one of the most eminent poets in the Irish language.
A week-to-view diary, this publication includes extracts of fiction, nonfiction and poetry.
Following in the footsteps of Nobel Laureate Heinrich Böll's 1956 classic Irish Journal, Hugo Hamilton revisits Boll's evocations of 18 places across the island to take stock of the changes that have occurred over the last seven decades in Ireland. Part travelogue, part memoir, part social commentary, and part comic masterpiece.
"Scotland" is another essential issue from Irish Pages, the island's leading literary journal.
Ben Dorain: A Conversation with a Mountain draws on the work of an eighteenth-century Gaelic poem by Duncan Ba n MacIntyre, rendering it into English.Where it does so, this is not to present MacIntyre's poetry per se to an English-language reader, as is customary with a translation or version.
Collection of essays by Hubert Butler, edited by Chris Agee and Jacob Agee, published by The Irish Pages Press
Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev og få rabatter og inspirasjon til din neste leseopplevelse.
Ved å abonnere godtar du vår personvernerklæring.