A utopian future for the planet: How ‘human solidarity’ can see us through
Sci-fi stories feel irrelevant to writer Kim Stanley Robinson now as his focus shifts to climate change
Sci-fi stories feel irrelevant to writer Kim Stanley Robinson now as his focus shifts to climate change
Donald Clarke: Problem is not with the writer but with the smallness of the critics’ minds
Welcome to The Irish Times book quiz: 10 questions to test your literary knowledge
Documents are littered with ‘roadmaps’, ‘kick-starts’ and ‘roll-outs’, not to mention terrifying ‘night mayors’
Dublin Theatre Festival: In Fishamble’s new production, all of Ireland remains in the UK and now faces a referendum on whether to stay
Important principles from the catechism of cliché and a parallel development
Tóibín’s error when discussing the prose in genre fiction was to move from ‘I just get bored’ to ‘it’s blank, it’s nothing’
Groundhog Day is considered the best example, but it wasn’t the first – or the last
Icelandic pianist used customised software to create new album `re:member'
In other countries libraries may be under threat but there’s a queue every morning outside Dublin’s Central Library
Tom Cruise’s 16 best films over a career that has stretched over 30 years
With Steven Sondheim’s ‘Assassins’ opening at the Gate, what drives the perpetrators. from Booth to Oswald to Hinckley?
Can Denis Villeneuve’s 163-minute sequel to Blade Runner rescue a ‘broken’ box office?
Review: Blade Runner 2049 is not without flaws, but it’s a marvel it works as well as it does
Freedom sometimes comes without liberation in new documentary ‘Fallout’
TV review: Another Philip K Dick adaptation, in this boom time for paranoia
Avocado Hand: An epidemic that afflicts incompetent slicers of trendy fruits is to be welcomed
Uncertainty principle gave rise to ‘many worlds’ theory which may excuse BBC commentators
It looks like Glasto is heading for a hiatus in 2019 and this week it announced its Variety Bazaar. But fans aren’t happy, and organiser Michael Eavis is openly worried “this might be one risk too far”
As they make a mockery of the other contestants in the Big Brother house, I find my heart swelling with national pride
Amazon Prime’s fascist-America drama may not capture the zeitgeist perfectly, but it’s not far off
Tackling malevolent cupcakes, mutant lesbians and “the man problem” at the Abbey
Show depicts alternate reality where Germany, Japan control US after winning WW2
The late American media artist was ahead of her time, but her reputation is now catching up with her powerful work; and Mayo artists respond to their home county
Smart pills, driverless cars and fridges that know what you need to stock up on: everything is about to become connected in what some are calling the greatest upheaval since the industrial revolution
Perhaps more than any other technology, robotisation and automation threaten to reshape society, and we better have some ideas as to how we will adapt to that changed landscape
He toured with Pearl Jam, and fired up Friday Night Lights, but cinematographer Shane Kelly’s best work is probably found in Boyhood
Ray Bradbury’s great dystopian vision is 60. Thankfully the book-burning world it depicts has not yet come to pass, so we can still read it and other dark visions
The festival, in its 25th year, continued to showcase new home-grown features, from mainstream-friendly recession comedy ‘Life’s a Breeze’ to the off-centre ‘Out of Here’
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Full general election coverage including analysis and results for all 43 constituencies
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices