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Peter Swanson: ‘Being lost in a book is one of the greatest feelings in the...

Peter Swanson is the author of two novels, The Girl with a Clock for a Heart, and The Kind Worth Killing (Faber & Faber, £14.99). His poems, stories and reviews have been published in journals such...

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A sneak preview of next Saturday’s books coverage in The Irish Times

On the fiction front this week, Irish Times crime-writing columnist Declan Burke reviews Belfast Noir, a Northern anthology edited by Stuart Neville and Adrian McKinty. Eileen Battersby reviews Uppsala...

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Melissa Hill Q&A: ‘The Secret Garden inspired my love of the mystery genre to...

Melissa Hill is the author of 13 novels, including Something from Tiffany’s, The Charm Bracelet and many more. A Gift to Remember was published by Simon & Schuster last year and her new novel, The...

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UCD academic Áine Mahon on Eggshells by Caitriona Lally: ‘a delightful debut’

In Caitriona Lally’s Eggshells we meet Vivian – nine tenths fictional creation and one tenth our own personality. Vivian is independent, creative, brave. She lives alone in Dublin in what was once her...

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Ebooks: Can’t decide what to read? Let somebody else choose for you

I spent last month following the lead of Louisa Cameron, patron of my local bookshop, Raven Books, who was making a concerted effort to read and promote the work of women writers in translation....

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Louise O’Neill: ‘I try and constantly cut back on the excess in my writing’

What was the first book to make an impression on you? The first book that I remember making an indelible impression on me was The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. I’m a voracious reader so it takes...

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Caitriona Lally on Eggshells: The Irish Times Book Club podcast

The Irish Times Book Club’s in-depth look at Caitriona Lally’s Eggshells reaches its climax with a podcast in which the author reads a passage from her debut novel and discusses...

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Brought to Book: John Boyne on Noddy, Homer Wells, ‘Birdsong’ and a Kindle tip

John Boyne’s latest novel is Stay Where You Are And Then Leave. His new novel for adults – his first set in contemporary Ireland – will be published by Doubleday in September, titled A History of...

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Maria Duffy Q&A: ‘I can get a week’s work done between 1am and 7am’

Maria Duffy is a bestselling Irish author and her latest novel, One Wish (Hachette Ireland) is out now in paperback. mariaduffy.ie What was the first book to make an impression on you? Other than Enid...

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Dublin, what a character

Dublin features in my novel, Eggshells, almost as a character in itself, a sometimes magical but occasionally sinister character. For Vivian, the protagonist, Dublin is the place she hopes will show...

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Eggshells by Caitriona Lally: ‘priceless thoughts on words and the world’

I sometimes show up to my book club without my homework: I’ve decided I only have time for books worth every moment spent on them. From the first page of Eggshells, I knew it was worth its word count...

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Philip Hensher: ‘Don’t aspire to be an author. Just aspire to write a...

What was the first book to make an impression on you? The Wizard of Oz, and especially the very weird sequel The Marvelous Land of Oz, where the hero undergoes a sex change in the penultimate chapter....

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Alex Miller: ‘Simple prose is valued more now than a decade ago’

Alex Miller is an Australian author, who won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize in 1993 for his novel The Ancestor Game. His eleventh novel, Coal Creek, was published in 2013. What was the first book to...

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Frankie Gaffney’s advice to writers: ‘give up the booze and break some rules’

What was the first book to make an impression on you? My Ma started reading to me long before I can remember, so I can’t recall a first book. Where the Wild Things Are made an early impression, though....

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Anthony Glavin on Eggshells by Caitriona Lally: a novel that keeps its promises

I’ll confess it was with fingers crossed that I opened Caitriona Lally’s beguiling debut novel, Eggshells, of which I had previously seen the first 10,000 words as one of three judges for the Irish...

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Review: Eggshells, by Caitriona Lally: full of action and humour

In his analysis of the works of James Joyce, the novelist, linguist and literary critic Anthony Burgess maintained that there are two types of novels – those focused on the world at large, with plot...

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Mark Billingham Q&A: ‘Cops solving crimes with supernatural powers strikes me...

Mark Billingham’s latest novel is The Bones Beneath, published by Grove Press. A former actor, television writer and stand-up comedian, his series of novels featuring DI Tom Thorne has twice won him...

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Gerard Lee’s motto: ‘Write something, or there’ll be no cake’

What was the first book to make an impression on you? Tarka the Otter by Henry Williamson. What was your favourite book as a child? The Boy with the Bronze Axe by Kathleen Fidler, published in 1968. I...

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‘I’m glad I didn’t know Eggshells would be published: not knowing was...

Caitriona Lally was a finalist in the 2014 Irish Writers’ Centre Novel Fair. Her first book, Eggshells, was published by Liberties Press in May. She has been shortlisted for Sunday Independent Newcomer...

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Alison Weir: ‘I loved fairy tales from infancy’

Alison Weir lives and works in Surrey. Her books include several works of non-fiction – Britain’s Royal Families, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, Children of England, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Henry VIII:...

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