The most reliable New Yorker you’ll ever meet
As it turns 100, the illustrious magazine remains rooted in the principles and traditions of print journalism. There is surely a lesson there
Seamus Heaney 1939-2013 – “The space we stood around had been emptied” (Clearances, The Haw Lantern, 1987)
As it turns 100, the illustrious magazine remains rooted in the principles and traditions of print journalism. There is surely a lesson there
Families have different views on the Omagh inquiry, but what they all hold sacred is the need for their loved ones’ stories to be heard
The debut novelist on her hotly tipped book, The Wardrobe Department and how she doesn’t know what she thinks about something until she starts writing about it
The celebrity clan have so Truman Show-ed their existence that all significant events in their lives have occurred on camera
Declan and Patsy Ryan recall receiving the restaurant industry’s highest accolade in 1974 for their Arbutus Lodge
Edited by Rosie Lavan and Bernard O’Donoghue with Matthew Hollis, it will be published on October 9th
The good, the bad and the ugly parts of studying English through Irish eyes at Oxford
President and fellow writers celebrate the legacy of one of Ireland’s finest poets
Michael Longley, from Belfast, received several awards for his 13 collections, including the Feltrinelli Prize
The New York-born poet on having resilience foisted upon her as a teenager when both of her parents died
Reviews: The Island in the Sound; Grand Tour; National Theatre; and Long Distance
Adrian Frazier’s no-holds-barred biography of the American-born Irish poet acknowledges the cost of a life turned ‘into the achievement of poetry’
Colcester, Florence, Belfast and elsewhere all intermingle in Philip Terry’s version of Dante’s Purgatorio
In their daily lives, Northerners seem more grown-up than Southerners
The Frontier of Writing: A Study of Seamus Heaney’s Prose edited by Ian Hickey and Eugene O’Brien; Citizen Poet: New & Selected Essays by Eavan Boland; Questioning Ireland by Thomas McCarthy
Wisdom and deftness were tools of writer whose subjects ranged from the lyrical to the sectarian
This centenary compilation pays tribute to the pre-eminent editor’s mission to enhance and uphold Ireland’s literary culture
Kathleen Watkins was one of the most enthusiastic people I’ve ever met
Through a lifetime of immense public and personal crises, through times of uncertainty and loss, Paul Durcan has remained true to his art
The human rights campaigner will attend benefit screening of a documentary about her life in Dublin in December
The poet met his wife, Edna, as a student at Trinity College Dublin. She has been the constant in a life that Longley reflects on in his new selected poems
Part of the so-called Coleraine Cluster of writers, Dawe explored a less-voiced north Belfast lower middle-class upbringing
Rite & Reason: As the environmental crisis has accelerated I find myself often thinking of the poet
Hughes’s new book, Emma, Disappeared, follows James Lyster, whose life begins to unravel after the disappearance of a high-achieving university graduate
Seamus Heaney was born on Thursday, April 13th, 1939. ‘Thursday’s child has far to go.’
Clued-in fans would know the musician as one half of The Lost Brothers, but the solo work that began as something to pass the time during lockdown soon turned into an idea he couldn’t ignore
The presumptive taoiseach used a familiar quote when introducing himself as leader, but whose line was it anyway?
Claire Hanna says ‘those of us who want to talk about a new Ireland have an obligation to spell out a lot more exactly what we mean by that’
The poet and editor on keeping a loved one’s memory alive, his literary journal Irish Pages and his regard for Seamus Heaney’s work
Belfast has a healthy literary scene, closely connected with Queen’s University, whose creative writing tutors include poets Gail McConnell and Stephen Sexton
The body of a young male was found in an area made famous by the work of the late Nobel laureate poet Seamus Heaney
Seamus Heaney and Czeslaw Milosz were firm friends and Nobel laureates. A writer’s residency has been established in Kraków in their memory
Q&A: The author of Pure Filth on being a ‘roaming Catholic’, the problem with inviting Turgenev to dinner and the state of poetry
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Get the latest news, analysis and match reports from the M6N and W6N championships
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices