My Holiday

My Holiday this week talks to Joe Duffy , Broadcaster

My Holidaythis week talks to Joe Duffy, Broadcaster

Earliest holiday memory?
Our summer holidays consisted of a day trip to Dollymount on the No 3 bus from Abbey Street. Some years the sun actually shone. We bought tea, I think from Bill Cullen's mother. She didn't sell penny apples then. That came later, through a leveraged buyout. One of the great attractions of Dollymount for my father was the pub across the lagoon - he swam to get to it.

Worst holiday?
Probably the year we took a day trip to Malahide (Dollier was so last year) and I cut my foot badly, requiring six stitches.

Best holiday?
That was easily with Keycamp in Norcenni in Italy. Great idea, aimed at kids. The parents even get a break, because everyone has kids.

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If budget or work was no restriction, what would be your dream holiday?
I would love to go on a cruise. I love the sea and visiting different places every day. The big problem with Liveline is that I am stuck in studio from one end of the year to another. I want an escape plan. The bigger the cruise ship the better.

If you had your pick, who would you bring on holiday with you?
I would bring Brush Shiels, Syl Fox, Doc Savage, Sonny Knowles and Clint Velour. Not only are they great fun, they are also the most intellectual company you can get. Jean-Paul Sartre could talk existentialism, but he couldn't tell a joke for nuts.

Your favourite place in Ireland?
Courtmacsherry Harbour Festival in July is easily the friendliest in the country.

What book would you recommend on holiday?
I would recommend the two I am reading at the moment, Why Can't I Speak, by an abuse survivor named Barbara Naughton - a powerful, searing read - and Goodbye Ardglass, a great saga of an Irish family - one builds, the other becomes a priest - written by a fine writer who is also Bertie's parish priest in Drumcondra, Willie King.

Where will you spend your next holiday?
I hope to head down to Courtmacsherry Harbour Festival again in July with the kids, to give them a break from the penal colony they claim to live in beside Dollymount.

In conversation with Fiona Gartland

Joe Duffy presents Liveline, RTÉ Radio 1, Monday-Friday 1.45pm