Programme - International Literature Festival Dublin
Transcription
Programme - International Literature Festival Dublin
InternationalLiterature LiteratureFestival FestivalDublin Dublin2015 2015May May16–24 16–24 International ilfdublin.com You complete the story International Literature Festival Dublin 2015 May 16–24 ilfdublin.com Lord Mayor’s Welcome A UNESCO City of Literature deserves a world-class literary festival and I’m very proud to welcome you to the seventeenth (and first!) International Literature Festival Dublin. This year’s festival is an all-new affair, with a new director and a brand new name, but one thing hasn’t changed: our commitment to delivering an exciting, surprising and wide-ranging programme of events that will have the city reading, talking, listening and debating over nine magical days in May. Whether you want to meet Australia’s greatest living writer, throw yourself into the LA Riots, plunge down the rabbit hole with Alice, find out what life is really like in Guantánamo, discover the secrets of a teenage superspy, make an appointment with the Book Doctor, or understand the crisis in Ukraine, You Complete the Story. I look forward to sharing it with you. Christy Burke Lord Mayor of Dublin Programme Director’s Welcome It’s a great privilege – and great fun – to shape the programme as the International Literature Festival Dublin sets off in new creative directions, and to present dispatches from Turkey, The Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iran, Finland, South Korea and many more countries, alongside a celebration of Ireland’s finest contemporary writers. Translating literature from one language to another, or from one artform to another, offers a touchstone for the festival, whether in contemporary novels, in classics like Finnegans Wake, or indeed in poems written over a thousand years ago, on which Ireland’s literary heritage rests. I love the buzz of meeting writers from around the world, and I also value the space that literature festivals offer to listen, think, debate and celebrate. I look forward to meeting you here… Martin Colthorpe Programme Director Event Venue Time Pg Sat 16 May Date with an Agent Belvedere House 10am – 5pm 58 Craft of Fiction Seminars Irish Writers Centre 10.30am –1.30pm 59 The Paper Princess The Ark 8 The Mouse who Ate the Moon: Petr Horáček The Ark 10.30am & 12.30pm 11.30am 8 Event Venue Time Pg Lost in Music with Ryan Gattis The Liquor Rooms 5pm 19 Christian Kracht, Clemens Setz & Carmen Stephan: New Writing in German Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 20 Maurice Riordan, Ciarán Carson & Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin: The Finest Music Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 21 The Only Jealousy of Emer Henrietta Street 6pm & 8pm 11 Picturing Stories with Chris Haughton The Ark 2pm 9 Gavin Corbett & Lisa McInerney Smock Alley Theatre 8pm 22 2pm – 6pm 10 Wurm im Apfel Oscars Café Bar 8pm 19 Blue is the Warmest Colour: Sepideh Jodeyri Talk & Screening The Gutter Bookshop & Hodges Figges Irish Film Institute 1.30pm 12 Elif Shafak Smock Alley Theatre 4pm 12 Petr Horáček The Ark 62 Sara Baume & Brian Dillon The LAB Gallery 6pm 13 Rumble with the Romans: Gary Northfield The Ark 10.15am & 11.30am 11.15am 62 Claire-Louise Bennett & Christine Montalbetti Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 13 The Only Jealousy of Emer Henrietta Street 6pm & 8pm John Gray Smock Alley Theatre Festival Club with Anna Jordan Oscars Café Bar Dublin Book Doctor Scéinséirí Stairiúla / Thrilling Histories An Siopa Leabhar 6pm 23 11 Ryan Gattis Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 24 8pm 14 The Only Jealousy of Emer Henrietta Street 6pm & 8pm 11 9pm 56 Poetry Ireland Introductions Series Irish Writers Centre 7pm 24 Smock Alley Theatre 8pm 25 Guantánamo Diary O'Reilly Theatre 6pm 26 Oliver Jeffers: Words and Pictures Smock Alley Theatre 6.30pm 27 Poetry Ireland Introductions Series Irish Writers Centre 7pm 24 Cogaí / Wars Smock Alley Theatre 8pm 28 Jon Ronson O'Reilly Theatre 8pm 29 Sun 17 May Heroes of the Wild: Nicola Davies The Ark 12pm 16 Trail Tales The Ark 1pm – 4pm 17 Book Clinic: Meet the Book & Doodle Doctors The Ark 1pm – 4pm 16 The Ark 3pm 17 Suzanne O'Sullivan Smock Alley Theatre 2pm 15 Alice in Wonderland: 150th Anniversary Smock Alley Theatre 4pm 18 Bestselling Besties with Judi Curtin & Sarah Webb Mon 18 May Johann Hari Tue 19 May Seminars/Workshops Children’s Events Fringe Events Event Venue Time Pg Wed 20 May Event Venue Time Pg Writing Art Criticism with Paper Visual Art Journal The LAB Gallery 10am – 5pm 61 Mindshift Irish Writers Centre 10.30am – 4.30pm 61 Story Weavers The Vagabond @ St Patrick’s Park 11am & 3pm 44 The Ark 11.15am 9 The Vagabond @ St Patrick’s Park 1pm 44 The Vagabond @ St Patrick’s Park 2pm 45 Books Upstairs & Dubray Books 2pm – 6pm 10 Smock Alley Theatre 2pm 43 Azar Nafisi Smock Alley Theatre 4pm 46 Anne Enright Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 47 Alas Awake 13 North Great George’s St, D1 7.30pm & 9pm 39 Smock Alley Theatre 8pm 48 Sat 23 May Once Upon an If... The Ark 11.15am 62 Thought Stories: Philosophy for Young Audiences The Ark 6pm 30 The Big Book Club Show Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 31 European Literature Night Various venues 6.30pm 32 Paul Muldoon Liberty Hall 8pm 33 Bodies That Can Never Tire: The Whole City Must Dance... Henry Street 8am – 8pm 38 Mr Leon’s Taxi: Sarah Ardizzone 10.15am 63 Dublin Book Doctor Killer Cats & Crummy Mummies: Anne Fine Central Library (ILAC Centre) Pearse Street Library 10.30am 63 Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 34 Poetry Ireland Introductions Series Irish Workman's Club 7pm 24 Second Book Syndrome Irish Writers Centre 7.30pm 59 Alain Mabanckou Smock Alley Theatre 8pm 35 Cuisle / Pulse Smock Alley Theatre 8pm 36 Bodies That Can Never Tire RDS Concert Hall 8pm 49 Alexander McCall Smith Smock Alley Theatre 8pm 37 Festival Club with Nialler9 Oscars Café Bar 9pm 57 Alas Awake 13 North Great George’s St, D1 9pm 39 Sun 24 May 9pm 56 Sofi Oksanen Smock Alley Theatre 12pm 50 Gerbrand Bakker Smock Alley Theatre 2pm 51 Dermot Bolger & Christine Dwyer Hickey Smock Alley Theatre 4pm 52 Deirdre Madden, Selina Guinness & Eoin McNamee: All Over Ireland Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 53 Alas Awake 7.30pm & 9pm 39 Only Himself: A Tribute to Dermot Healy 13 North Great George’s St, D1 O'Reilly Theatre 8pm 55 Thur 21 May City Dreams with Bali Rai Diarmaid Ferriter & Maurice Walsh: Writing Revolution Festival Club with Isobel Anderson Oscars Café Bar Fri 22 May Diversity in Children's Literature The Ark 11am – 1pm 60 Peter Carey Smock Alley Theatre 6pm 40 Cré Na Cille / The Dirty Dust Smock Alley Theatre 8pm 41 Irvine Welsh Liberty Hall 8pm 42 Alas Awake 13 North Great George’s St, D1 9pm 39 9pm 57 Festival Club with Dylan Tighe Oscars Café Bar Everyone’s a Translator: Sarah Ardizzone A Retelling of Alice in Wonderland Eun Hee-kyung Anne Applebaum & Peter Pomerantsev AT RE TG RK S MA How to Book / Venues Venues Tickets to all events are available online www.ilfdublin.com Festival Box Office 4 In person & by phone (only from 9 May – 24 May) B Filmbase Curved St, Temple Bar, Dublin 2 Opening Hours 11am – 6pm Mon – Sat 12 – 5pm Sunday T +353 (0) 1 687 7977 E [email protected] Festival Administration Dublin City Council Arts Office The Lab, Foley St, Dublin 1 T +353 (0) 1 222 5455 E [email protected] Ticket concessions are available for students, senior citizens and the unwaged. Subject to availability. All sales are final. No substitutions or exchanges. Online and phone bookings are subject to a €1 booking fee. 2 10 1 13 North Great George’s St, Dublin 1 Books Upstairs 5 17 D’Olier St, Dublin 2 3Central Library 5 6 Ilac Centre, Henry Street, Dublin 1 24 Grafton St, Dublin 2 Henrietta Street Hodges Figgis 56-58 Dawson St, Dublin 2 7 Irish Film Institute 8 Irish Writers Centre 9 Liberty Hall 19 Parnell Square, Dublin 1 1 Eden Quay, D1 10 O’Reilly Theatre & Belvedere House Great Denmark St, Dublin 1 11 Oscars Café Bar 12 Pearse Street Library 13 RDS Concert Hall 14 Smock Alley Theatre 9 6 Eustace St, Dublin 2 3 14 Henrietta St, Dublin 1 17 Dubray Books 16-18 Fishamble St, Dublin 8 2 18 19 14 FISHAMBLE ST. Festival Bookseller The Gutter Bookshop Cow’s Lane, Temple Bar, Dublin T +353 (0) 1 679 9206 E info@gutterbookshop 1 8 N DE EE TR B 7 12 16 11 144 Pearse St, Dublin 2 6 Merrion Rd, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4 Exchange St, Lower, Temple Bar, Dublin 8 4 15 15 St. Patrick’s Park Patrick St, Dublin 8 16 The Ark 17 18 11a Eustace St, Temple Bar, Dublin 2 The LAB Foley St, Dublin 1 The Liquor Rooms 7 Wellington Quay, Dublin 2 10 Wellington Quay, Dublin 2 6 Harcourt St, Dublin 2 19 20 20 The Workman’s Club An Siopa Leabhar 13 7 Date Sat 16 May Time 10.30am & 12.30pm Venue The Ark Age 3 – 7 Picturing Stories with Chris Haughton Tickets €5 (Note: capacity is limited to 30 for each performance) Monkeyshine Theatre Company presents The Paper Princess, a delightful show for younger children based on the book by Elisa Kleven. A little girl makes a paper princess but, before she has finished, the princess blows away! Told using a miniature theatre with tiny lights, and accompanied by live music, this beautiful story follows the princess’ journey as she tries to find her way home. Presented as a birthday party, the performance also includes an opportunity to make your own paper doll using crayons, sequins and stars, ready to be taken home after the show. The Mouse Who Ate the Moon: Petr Horácek Date Sat 16 May Time 11.30am Venue The Ark Age 4+ Tickets €5 When Little Mouse wakes one morning, she finds her dream has come true. Outside her burrow, a piece of the moon has fallen from the sky and it smells delicious. Peep through the cut-out holes in this beautiful and heart-warming tale from the much-loved Petr Horáček. After the reading, children can make their own little books to take home. Date Sat 16 May Time 2pm Venue The Ark Age 4+ Tickets €5 Sat 16 & Sat 23 May The Paper Princess Join Chris Haughton, author of the award-winning Shh! We Have a Plan (Irish Book Awards), for a mixture of stories, pictures, puppets, action and participation to delight young readers, and watch as he brings your ideas to life with live drawing. A favourite of art and design aficionados, as well as parents, Chris is the creator of picture books A Little Bit Lost and Oh No, George! A perfect way to celebrate National Drawing Day. Everyone’s a Translator with Sarah Ardizzone Date Sat 23 May Time 11.15am Venue The Ark Age 6+ Tickets €5 Join award-winning translator Sarah Ardizzone for this unique event. In this special workshop, Sarah invites you to help her translate Marjolaine Leray’s witty picture book Un Petit Chaperon Rouge from the original French into English. But don’t worry – no knowledge of French is required! A fun and stimulating event for everyone aged six and up. Petr Horáček has won many awards for classics such as Suzy Goose and A New House for Mouse and was shortlisted for the prestigious Kate Greenaway Medal in 2012. 8 9 Sat 16, Sun 17, Mon 18 & Sat 23 May Dublin Book Doctor The Only Jealousy of Emer Date Sat 16 May Time 2pm – 6pm Venue The Gutter Bookshop & Hodges Figgis Date Sat 16, Sun 17 & Mon 18 May Time 6pm & 8pm Venue Henrietta Street Tickets €10 / €8 Date Sat 23 May Time 2pm – 6pm Venue Books Upstairs & Dubray Books Tickets €5 Sometimes you just don’t know what to read next. But don’t worry – the Book Doctors are here to help! Drop into our bookshop ‘clinics’ for a consultation with one of our highly trained book doctors, including Paul Howard, Sarah Bannan, John Banville, Gavin Corbett, Lisa McInerney, Eoin McNamee and Ryan Tubridy amongst others. Once they’ve taken the pulse of your reading habits, they’ll prescribe a brand new book-from cookery to crime-that’s guaranteed to be just what you need. Do take a chance on getting a great recommendation from a Book Doctor you might not know. All proceeds go to Alone, the independent charity that works with older people in crisis. Presented in association with Dublin Book Doctor volunteers. Part of the Cúchulainn Cycle of five plays about the life and death of the mythic Irish hero, The Only Jealousy of Emer continues Yeats’ experiments with Japanese Noh theatre as a way of bringing onto the stage demons, ghosts and supernatural events. Cúchulainn has killed his son and, in grief, attempts to fight the sea. Half drowned, he lies in a state between life and death with his wife Emer and his mistress Eithne watching over him. But, as these two women struggle to revive him, is something far more sinister about to occur? Produced by the City Arts Office in association with Yemi and Deji Adenuga for Nigerian Carnival Ireland, the production is designed by Robert Ballagh, with costumes by Marie Tierney and choreography by Liz Roche. Performers Yemi Adenuga Deji Adenuga Oluwayomi Ogunyemi Esosa Ighodaro Penelope Anyaji-Aniuzu This production has been generously supported and forms part of the National Yeats 2015 programme. 10 11 Date Sat 16 May Time 1.30pm Venue Irish Film Institute Tickets €12 / €10 Date Sat 16 May Time 6pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 Sat 16 May Claire-Louise Bennett & Christine Montalbetti Blue is the Warmest Colour: Sepideh Jodeyri Talk & Screening When the poet Sepideh Jodeyri published a Persian translation of Blue is the Warmest Colour, a prize-winning graphic novel about a passionate relationship between two young women, she faced a campaign of intimidation in her native Iran so fierce it drove her into exile in Prague. In this special event, Jodeyri joins LGBT activist Ailbhe Smyth to explore the cost of freedom of expression in a country where homosexuality is illegal. The discussion will be followed by a special screening of Blue is the Warmest Colour, Abdellatif Kechiche’s adaptation of Julie Maroh’s graphic novel, which won the Palme d’Or at Cannes in 2013. This event brings together two writers whose experimental take on narrative is pushing fiction in exciting new directions. Claire-Louise Bennett won the inaugural White Review Short Story Prize in 2013 and writes both fiction and creative non-fiction. Her debut collection of stories, Pond, has just been published. Christine Montalbetti is a professor of literature at the University of Paris and the author of several scholarly works on narrative. Her playful and digressive tales like Western (in which the story of a mysterious gunslinger is continually sidetracked by the viewpoint of passing ants) are finally appearing in English, confirming her reputation as one of the most engaging experimental writers working today. Presented in association with the Irish Film Institute and Art for Amnesty. Presented in association with the Embassy of France in Ireland. Elif Shafak Sara Baume & Brian Dillon Date Sat 16 May Time 4pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 “the most exciting Turkish novelist to reach Western readers in years” The Irish Times The prolific writer and journalist Elif Shafak is one of the most significant voices in contemporary fiction. An outspoken campaigner and champion of minority rights, she is not afraid to tackle controversial subjects, from the Armenian genocide in The Bastard of Istanbul, to honour killings in Honour. Her new book, The Architect’s Apprentice, is a spellbinding magic-realist tale set at the height of Ottoman power and telling the story of the great imperial architect Mimar Sinan through the eyes of Jahan, a young stowaway who arrives in Istanbul with nothing but a white elephant in tow. Shafak discusses her new work with Brendan Barrington, editor of The Dublin Review. 12 Date Sat 16 May Time 6pm Venue The LAB Gallery Tickets €10 / €8 Art critics don’t always make good novelists (and vice versa), and this event explores the challenges of combining the critical and the creative in writing. Sara Baume studied fine art at Dun Laoghaire before turning to writing, and her debut novel Spill Simmer Falter Wither has been showered with the sort of acclaim usually reserved for Booker Prize winners. Brian Dillon is a lecturer at the Royal College of Art whose research into ruins produced a critical study, an exhibition at Tate Britain and the novella Sanctuary. His new novel, The Great Explosion, brings to life a forgotten tragedy that took place during the First World War. 13 Sat 16 & Sun 17 May John Gray Suzanne O’Sullivan: Date Sat 16 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 Date Sun 17 May Time 2pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 “Gray forces us to face the mirror and see ourselves as we are” Anyone who has experienced joy or grief knows the extreme reactions that our bodies can have to our emotional state. But the phenomenon goes much deeper than we’re prepared to admit. Many physical illnesses begin in the mind. James Lovelock The acclaimed philosopher, sceptic and writer makes a welcome return to the festival with his new book, The Soul of the Marionette, a characteristically provocative exploration of the nature of human freedom that ranges over everything from cybernetics to fairground marionettes. Why do we flatter ourselves that we enjoy free will, Gray asks, when our actions are determined, directed and restricted by a whole range of forces: biological, social or metaphysical? Through a dazzling parade of writers, thinkers and ideas, Gray argues that instead of deluding ourselves about our true nature we should learn to embrace it. 14 It’s All in Your Head For twenty years consultant neurologist Dr Suzanne O’Sullivan has worked with patients with psychogenic disorders – an experience that inspired her controversial new book, It’s All in Your Head. In this event, O’Sullivan talks to writer Brian Dillon (author of The Hypochondriacs: Nine Tormented Lives) about her book, asking why we continue to insist on the separation of body and mind – even at the risk of our health. 15 Age 7 – 10 Tickets €5 Date Sun 17 May Time 12pm Venue The Ark Trail Tales Date Sun 17 May Time 1pm – 4pm Venue The Ark Sun 17 May Heroes of the Wild: Nicola Davies Age 3 – 9, family friendly Tickets Free (Drop in) Did you know that a two-year-old child could crawl through the arteries of a blue whale? Or that its heart is the same size as a smart car? Meet Nicola Davies as she shares the secrets of her work with animals from all over the world. Nicola is a trained zoologist, a former presenter of BBC’s The Really Wild Show, and the awardwinning author of The First Book of Nature, The Promise and the Heroes of the Wild series. Find out where she gets her inspiration, ask her all your questions and share stories about your favourite and not-so-favourite animals! Become part of a knee-high board game (created by Spanish designers Milimbo) and create your own fairy tales. As you journey through a cardboard forest, watch out for The House of the Dwarf, Rapunzel’s Tower and The Lost Mountain. Solve the story puzzle and get to the Treasure Chest to make a wish. Book Clinic: Meet the Book & Doodle Doctors Bestselling Besties: Judi Curtin & Sarah Webb Date Sun 17 May Time 1pm – 4pm Venue The Ark Age All ages Tickets Free (Drop in) Presented in association with Artsadmin and the Bamboo network, supported through the EU Culture Programme. Date Sun 17 May Time 3pm Venue The Ark Age 8+ Tickets €5 Are you a young reader? Feeling uninspired by your bookshelves at home? Then pop along to the Book Clinic! Parents and children are invited to drop in for an informal consultation with one of Children’s Books Ireland’s friendly panel of Book Doctors, ready to offer the best advice to the young readers in your family. Bestselling authors Judi Curtin and Sarah Webb have been friends for many years. Find out where they first met and how they help each other’s writing in this very special event. They will also answer all your questions about their brand new books, so don’t forget to bring your best friend! First families meet the Doodle Doctors, specialists in making the waiting room more fun! Then, when the Book Doctor is ready, the consultation begins. When the Book Doctor has made their diagnosis he/she writes a prescription for your local library or bookshop, and every patient leaves with their own personalised Reading Passport! Judi Curtin is the bestselling author of the Alice and Megan series (including Alice to the Rescue and Viva Alice!). She is also the author of the Eva series, including her latest book, Only Eva. Sarah Webb’s first book in her new children’s series, The Songbird Cafe Girls: Mollie Cinnamon is Not a Cupcake, has recently been published. She is also the author of the Ask Amy Green series and many other children’s books. 16 17 Date Sun 17 May Time 5pm Alice in Wonderland: 150th Anniversary with Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, Fiona Shaw & Vanessa Tait In the age of Spotify and iTunes, the mixtape – that personal collection of favourite songs – has all but vanished from our lives. But, for many writers, mixtapes are still central to their work: a source of inspiration and the soundtrack to their stories. In this one-off event for ILF Dublin, Ryan Gattis presents Lost in Music: a musical journey through his acclaimed new novel All Involved, a kaleidoscopic tale of race, revenge and loyalty set during the 1992 LA Riots (see page 24). Ryan plays the songs that feature in the novel – everything from Cypress Hill to The Supremes – and explains how they inspired the characters and scenes. Date Sun 17 May Time 4pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 Wurm im Apfel It’s 150 years since an obscure English writer called Charles Lutwidge Dodgson published the curious tale of a little girl who falls down a rabbit hole under the pseudonym Lewis Carroll. Since then, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland has been through more than 100 editions, sold millions of copies worldwide, been translated into 174 languages, and is now widely acknowledged as a timeless classic. Join us for this special event of live readings, debate and celebration, featuring Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, author of a new biography of Carroll, actress Fiona Shaw, who has recorded readings of the book for the BBC and Vanessa Tait, the great-granddaughter of Alice Liddell, the girl who inspired the Alice character, and the author of The Looking Glass House. Date Sun 17 May Time 8pm 18 Venue The Liquor Rooms Tickets €5 Sun 17 May Lost in Music with Ryan Gattis Venue Oscars Café Bar, Fishamble St Tickets €5 Wurm im apfel is a Dublin-based poetry organisation co-founded by Kit Fryatt and Dylan Harris. Taking its name from a poem by the late German artist and writer Reinhard Döhl, Wurm presents fresh, unusual or experimental poetry to audiences all over Dublin and beyond. This special event for ILF Dublin offers an eclectic mix of music and experimental poetry from a wealth of talent, including performance poet Máighréad Medbh and sound/performance artist Vicky Langan. 19 Sun 17 May Christian Kracht, Clemens Setz & Carmen Stephan: Maurice Riordan, Ciarán Carson & Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin: Date Sun 17 May Time 6pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre (Boy’s School) Tickets €10 / €8 Date Sun 17 May Time 6pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 The German-speaking world is producing some of the most exciting writers working today. This special event brings showcases the depth of talent with three leading writers from Austria, Germany, Switzerland. Three of our best poets join forces for this unique event exploring the ancient poems on which Ireland’s rich literary heritage rests. Maurice Riordan is the driving force behind The Finest Music, a recent anthology that gathers Riordan’s own translations of medieval Irish poems alongside versions by everyone from Tennyson and Auden to Heaney and Muldoon, as well as fresh interpretations by acclaimed contemporary poets like Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and Ciarán Carson, both of whom join Riordan onstage. Featuring readings in both Irish and English, lively debate and music from Ciarán Carson himself, this is an unmissable celebration. New Writing in German Through novels such as Faserland, Swiss novelist Christian Kracht has established himself as one of the foremost German-language writers, a master of irony, ambiguity and suggestion. German writer Carmen Stephan’s first novel, Mal Aria, won a clutch of prestigious awards, including the Jürgen Ponto-Siftung Literature Prize and the Buddenbrookhaus Debut, while Clemens Setz is an award-winning Austrian novelist, twice nominated for the German Book Prize, whose psychological thriller Indigo was translated into English last year. The Finest Music Presented in association with Poetry Ireland. This event is presented in association with the Austrian Embassy Dublin, the Goethe-Institut Irland and the Embassy of Switzerland in Ireland. 20 21 Sun 17 & Mon 18 May Gavin Corbett & Lisa McInerney Scéinséirí Stairiúla / Thrilling Histories Date Sun 17 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 Dáta / Date Mon 18 May Am / Time 6pm Ionad / Venue An Siopa Leabhar Áirithint / Tickets €5 “[Gavin Corbett is] a wonderful new voice” Joseph O’Neill “[Lisa McInerney is] totally and unmistakably the real deal” Kevin Barry This event brings together two of the most exciting and original new voices in Irish fiction to discuss their work with RTÉ’s Paula Shields. “Every sentence throbs with power” wrote Emma Donoghue of This is the Way, Gavin Corbett’s award-winning debut. His new work, Green Glowing Skull, is a delirious comedy set in Manhattan, where a young Irish immigrant arrives with dreams of reinventing himself as a tenor. Lisa McInerney’s blog about life on a Galway council estate prompted The Irish Times to describe her as “the most talented writer at work today in Ireland”. Her first novel, The Glorious Heresies, delivers on that promise with a darkly comic tale of five postboom misfits drawn together by murder. 22 Tá an-éileamh go deo ar fhicsean stairiúil le blianta beaga anuas agus tá an tóir chéanna air as Gaeilge agus atá air as Béarla. Bígí linn le haghaidh díospóireacht bhríomhar phainéil le Cathal Póirtéir mar chathaoirleach uirthi ina ndéanfar plé ar chuile rud ó Chath Fontenoy go húrscéalta bleachtaireachta atá spreagtha ag gnéithe áirithe den stair. I measc na bpainéalaithe beidh Liam Mac Cóil, údar Fontenoy, a bhí ar ghearrliosta na Comhairle Ealaíona le déanaí le haghaidh an Laureate i gComhair Ficsean Éireannach, Darach Ó Scolaí, údar An Cléireach a bhuaigh Gradam Uí Shúilleabháin, Gradam Leabhar na Bliana i 2008 agus Seán Ó Dúrois, údar Rí na gCearrbhach agus Crann Smóla. Historical fiction has stormed the bookshelves in recent years and is as popular in the Irish language as in English. Join us for a lively panel, chaired by Cathal Póirtéir, that will discuss everything from the Battle of Fontenoy to historically inspired detective novels. Panelists include: Liam Mac Cóil, recently shortlisted for the Arts Council’s Irish Fiction Laureate and author of Fontenoy; Darach Ó Scolaí, author of An Cléireach which won Gradam Uí Shúilleabháin Book of the Year Award in 2008; and Seán Ó Dúrois (Rí na gCearrbhach and Crann Smola). Curtha i bhur láthair i gcomhar le hÁras na Scríbhneoirí agus IMRAM. Presented in assocation with the Irish Writers Centre and IMRAM. 23 Date Mon 18 May Time 6pm Mon 18 May Ryan Gattis Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 In April 1992, the acquittal of three white police officers accused of beating black teenager Rodney King sparked frenzied rioting in South Central Los Angeles. Out of this chaos, novelist, lecturer and graffiti artist Ryan Gattis has woven one of the novels of the year: an adrenaline-fuelled story of race, revenge and loyalty that follows the intersecting lives of a huge cast of Chicano gangsters, drug dealers, graffiti artists, medics and Korean vigilantes over six terrifying days. Gattis explores how he came to write this coruscating portrait of a multi-ethnic city in revolt. Poetry Ireland Introductions Series Johann Hari Date Mon 18 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 “Johann Hari’s book is the perfect antidote to the war on drugs, one of the most under-discussed moral injustices of our time” Date Mon 18 & Tue 19 May Date Thur 21 May Venue Irish Writers Centre Venue Workman’s Club Time 7pm Time 7pm Tickets €8 / €5 (to book visit poetryireland.ie) Since its establishment in 1989, Poetry Ireland’s Introductions Series has offered talented emerging poets a chance to showcase their work. Many acclaimed poets have come through this series including Enda Wyley, Kerry Hardie, Alan Jude Moore, Pat Boran and Caoilinn Hughes. This year, the Poetry Ireland Introductions Series teams up with the Irish Writers Centre, The Workman’s Club and ILF Dublin to reveal 16 promising new voices over three cabaret-style evenings that also feature specially selected accompaniment from emerging musicians, singers and songwriters. Poetry Ireland in association with the Irish Writers Centre, The Workman’s Club and International Literature Festival Dublin presents Poetry Ireland Introductions Series 2015. 24 Glenn Greenwald To mark the 100th anniversary of the first drugs ban in the United States, awardwinning British journalist Johann Hari set off on an epic journey across the world and into the war on drugs. Meeting the people whose lives have been devastated – in different ways – by drugs, Hari made some astonishing discoveries: drugs are not what we think they are, and the war on drugs has very different motives from the ones we see on TV. The result was Chasing the Scream, a New York Times bestseller and a passionate and timely intervention into one of the most controversial questions of our time. 25 Tue 19 May Guantánamo Diary: Oliver Jeffers: Nancy Hollander & Larry Siems Words and Pictures Date Tue 19 May Time 6pm Venue O’Reilly Theatre Tickets €15 / €12.50 Date Tue 19 May Time 6.30pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €8 / €5 “the most profound account yet written of what it is like to be … collateral damage” “Jeffers’s illustrations delight, inspire and surprise with their variety and ingenuity” Mohamedou Ould Slahi’s Guantánamo Diary is one of the global publishing events of the year. Handwritten from his cell in 2005, and published after years of legal wrangling, it describes the ordeal of a man who, despite never being charged, has spent fourteen years in the prison, subjected to endless forms of torture under Donald Rumsfeld’s “special interrogation plan”. Born in Australia, brought up in Northern Ireland and now living in New York, Oliver Jeffers’ work takes many forms. His distinctive paintings have been exhibited all over the world. Oliver’s picture books have been translated into over 30 languages and include Lost & Found, Stuck, The Hueys, The Incredible Book Eating Boy, The Great Paper Caper, This Moose Belongs to Me, The Day the Crayons Quit written by Drew Daywalt, and his most recent book Once Upon an Alphabet. He won an Emmy in 2010 for his collaborative work with MacPremo, with whom he co-directed the U2 video Ordinary Love in 2013. For a unique insight into his life and work, join him for a whistle-stop tour around the world of Oliver Jeffers. The New York Times Larry Siems, the book’s editor, joins Nancy Hollander, Slahi’s attourney (and one of the few people to have got to know Slahi since his incarceration), to discuss how Slahi wrote the book and what life is like in an institution that President Obama promised to close. The event is chaired by Carole Coleman, journalist and author, and RTÉ’s former Washington correspondent, who reported from Guantánamo shortly after it was opened and who challenged George Bush on the conditions at the prison in a live interview. Featuring live and recorded readings by actors and writers, Guantánamo Diary is one of the festival’s must-see events. 26 The Guardian 27 Tue 19 May Cogaí / Wars Jon Ronson Date Tue 19 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre (Boy’s School) Tickets €10 / €8 Date Tue 19 May Time 8pm Venue O’Reilly Theatre Tickets €15 / €12.50 Damhsa, ceol, prós, íomhánna ar scáileán – léiriú ar an gcogaíocht agus ar an bhforéigean síoraí, bunaithe ar chnuasach gearrscéalta den teideal céanna le Dáithí Ó Muirí. Páirteach ann tá Fearghus Ó Conchúir, rinceoir agus fear cóirithe rince, giotáraí agus cumadóir Enda Reilly, agus Margaret Lonergan a bheidh i mbun na n-íomhánna scáileáin. Coimeádaí an tionscadail: Liam Carson, IMRAM Féile Litríochta Gaeilge. Exploring the theme of unending war and violence, Cogaí is a stunning multi-media show that fuses dance, music, prose and screen projections – and is based on the short story collection of the same title by Dáithí Ó Muirí. It features acclaimed dancer and choreographer Fearghus Ó Conchúir, guitarist and composer Enda Reilly and screen projections created by Margaret Lonergan. Curated by Liam Carson, IMRAM Irish Language Literature Festival. “my God, he is funny” The Observer Jon Ronson is one of the most original (and funniest) investigative journalists working today. Whether hanging out with the Klu Klux Klan in Them, exploring the US military’s fascination with the paranormal in The Men Who Stare at Goats, or attending a UFO convention with Robbie Williams in Lost at Sea, his work exposes the paranoid, the deluded and the bizarre. But in his new book, So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed, Ronson tells the stories of ordinary people with ordinary flaws – people who, after making mistakes, have found themselves at the centre of a social media storm. The age of Twitter is often said to have democratised justice but what, asks Ronson, if ‘justice’ really means ‘the mob’? The event will be chaired by Today FM presenter Anton Savage. 28 29 Wed 20 May Thought Stories: The Big Book Club Show Date Wed 20 May Time 6pm Venue The Ark Tickets €5 Date Wed 20 May Time 6pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 Philosophy will be introduced into secondary schools from 2017, and many argue for its formal introduction to primary schools. Ever wondered how to write the perfect thriller? Or perhaps you’re a culture vulture who knows a lot about books? If so, The Big Book Club Show is for you! Thought Stories explores the potential of literature to introduce philosophy and critical thinking to children and young people, and will be of interest to parents, educators and literature-lovers alike. In the first part of the show, Irish Times Digital Editor Hugh Linehan talks to acclaimed thriller writers Liz Nugent (Unravelling Oliver) and Sinéad Crowley (Can Anybody Help Me?), asking how they went about creating characters who do terrible things. Peter Worley is Co-Founder and CEO of The Philosophy Foundation and President of SOPHIA, the European Foundation for the Advancement of Doing Philosophy with Children. He is also an award-winning author of The If Machine. In part two, The Big Book Club Quiz offers you a chance to test your literary knowledge against a team of experts captained by Hugh Linehan, and a crack book club squad captained by comedian and writer Colm O’Regan. Hosted with irrepressible cheek by Stephen Faloon, manager of the Bord Gáis Energy Theatre, who likes to award bonus points for clever answers and whisk them away for mistakes, The Big Book Club Show is a fast, fun and competitive night. You might even win a prize! Philosophy for Young Audiences Anne Fine is one of Britain’s most distinguished writers for both adults and children, twice voted UK Children’s Author of the Year. Anne was UK Children’s Laureate from 2001 to 2003. She set up www.myhomelibrary.org, to inspire children to form their own home libraries. Dr Philomena Donnelly (chair) introduced Philosophy With Children into Irish primary schools in 1989 and since then has been an advocate of having philosophy in the form of Socratic dialogue present at all levels of education. 30 31 Wed 20 May Words on the Street Paul Muldoon European Literature Night Date Wed 20 May Time 6.30pm – 8.30pm Venue Various venues Tickets Free Date Wed 20 May Time 8pm Venue Liberty Hall Tickets €12 / €10 Try a taste of contemporary European writing on a literary trail around hidden, and not-so-hidden, architectural gems from Parnell Square to North Great George’s Street. Listen to the best modern writing from 12 countries read by Irish (and a Scot) celebrities – Alexander McCall Smith, Síle Seoige, Aidan Power, Mary Kennedy and many more in places such as Belvedere House, Findlater’s Church, DARC Space, ICTU HQ. Pick up a programme from local libraries, venues and tourist offices. “the definitive 21st century poet” www.dublincityofliterature.ie The Irish Times New Weather, Paul Muldoon’s debut collection (published when he was just 20 years old), prompted Seamus Heaney to describe him as “the most promising poet to appear in Ireland for years”. 42 years later, that promise has been amply fulfilled. Muldoon is a master of language and form, a Pulitzer Prize-winner celebrated for his linguistic dexterity, his technical brilliance and his ability to make connections between the unlikeliest of things. All those skills are on display in this special event for ILF Dublin, in which Muldoon showcases One Thousand Things Worth Knowing, his acclaimed new collection that “anyone interested in new writing will want to read” (The Irish Times). Presented in association with Poetry Ireland. 32 33 Thur 21 May Diarmaid Ferriter & Maurice Walsh: Alain Mabanckou Writing Revolution Date Thur 21 May Time 6pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 Three years into the ‘decade of centenaries’, and with the hundredth anniversary of the Easter Rising rapidly approaching, ILF Dublin brings together two leading historians whose work offers fresh perspectives on the most dramatic years in Irish history. Diarmaid Ferriter’s “magisterial” (Irish Independent) new book, A Nation and Not a Rabble, draws on newly released archive materials to tell the stories of the ordinary men and women who lived and fought in the revolutionary years, while Maurice Walsh’s Bitter Freedom restores the conflict to its international context, showing how the Irish revolution was at the forefront of a global movement for independence. The event will be chaired by Catriona Crowe. Date Thur 21 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 “one of the continent’s greatest writers” The Guardian Novelist, poet and essayist Alain Mabanckou has been shortlisted for the Man Booker International Prize 2015, and is one of the most celebrated Francophone writers of our times, feted for his intoxicating mix of Congolese rhythms and Parisian slang. In a string of award-winning novels such as Broken Glass and African Psycho, Mabanckou displays a flair for exuberant satire that has led him to be dubbed Africa’s Samuel Beckett. Fresh from the World Voice Festival in New York, Mabanckou reflects on his work in the company of award-winning translator Sarah Ardizzone, and talks about The Lights of Pointe-Noire, a memoir about his return to the Congo and a tender reflection on the meaning of home. Presented in association with the Embassy of France in Ireland. 34 35 Thur 21 May Cuisle: Tionscadal Dordfhilíochta / Pulse: The Poems and Bass Project Alexander McCall Smith Date Thur 21 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre (Boy’s School) Tickets €10 / €8 Date Thur 21 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 Oíche speisialta ina mbeidh filí ag léamh/rapáil/caint is gan de thionlacan acu ach dordghiotáir. I measc na bhfilí beidh Marcus Mac Conghail, Ailbhe Ní Ghearbhuigh, Liam Ó Muirthile, agus Séamus Barra Ó Súilleabháin. Is iad na hoirfidigh ar an ngiotár ná Martin Brunsden (a sheinn le leithéidí Sinéad O’Connor, P J Harvey agus Iarla Ó Lionáird), Neville Lloyd agus Eoin O’Brien. Coimeádaí an tionscadail: Liam Carson, IMRAM Féile Litríochta Gaeilge. “McCall Smith is a literary phenomenon” A magical night in which poets read/rap/talk to the sole accompaniment of bass guitars, both acoustic and electric. Poets include Marcus Mac Conghail, Ailbhe Ní Ghearbhuigh, Liam Ó Muirthile and Séamus Barra Ó Súilleabháin. The bass players are Martin Brunsden (who has played with Sinéad O’Connor, P J Harvey and Iarla Ó Lionáird), Neville Lloyd and Eoin O’Brien. Curated by Liam Carson, IMRAM Irish Language Literature Festival. 36 The Daily Telegraph It’s 15 years since The No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency introduced the world to Precious Ramotswe, Botswana’s leading (in fact, only) female PI. Since then her creator, Alexander McCall Smith, has become one of the UK’s best-loved authors, selling over 20 million books, launching several successful new series (including Scotland Street), and becoming perhaps the second most famous resident of Edinburgh’s New Town (where JK Rowling also lives). In this special event, McCall Smith comes to Dublin to talk about the characters and themes that have won him millions of readers all over the world. Presented in association with the British Council. 37 Thur 21, Fri 22, Sat 23 & Sun 24 May Bodies That Can Never Tire Alas Awake The Whole City Must Dance – The Whole City Must Bid! Date Thur 21 May Time 8am – 8pm Venue Henry Street Tickets All Welcome Date Thur 21 & Fri 22 May Time 9pm Date Sat 23 & Sun 24 May Time 7.30pm & 9pm Venue 13 North Great George’s Street, Dublin 1 Tickets €12 / €10 The first of two events in honour of WB Yeats’ 150th birthday – and inspired by his famous lines, ‘That he follow with desire/Bodies that can never tire’ – Bodies That Can Never Tire: The Whole City Must Dance – the Whole City Must Bid! is an all-day dance marathon taking place on Henry Street, one of Dublin’s major shopping streets. Drawing on contemporary choral work, collage, improvisation, live electronics and installation this ambitious project is an abstract homage to one of literature’s great works of abstraction. The acclaimed composer and performer Seán Mac Erlaine presents a new site-specific setting of Finnegans Wake for improvising choir, woodwinds, electronics and film. Part of Dublin’s bid to be European Capital of Culture 2020, this event extends an invitation to Dublin’s dancers to mix contemporary, hip-hop, ballet, tap, jazz (and everything in between) in an exuberant celebration of movement, creativity and dance. All dance groups, amateur or professional, in any form, are welcome. Groups wishing to participate should contact [email protected]. More details will be available online at www.dublin2020.ie. Bodies That Can Never Tire: The Whole City Must Dance – the Whole City Must Bid! is a collaboration between Dublin2020, International Literature Festival Dublin, Dublin Dance Festival and Dublin Town. Free Event – all donations and fundraising proceeds go to Temple Street Children’s Hospital. Photo: Dublin Youth Dance Co. Photographer Karla Holden. 38 Presented as a theatre-style promenade piece, audiences will be led through an abandoned Georgian residence in a heightened environment conjuring the world and epoch of Joyce’s Dublin. These innovative artists will work with the poetic elements of the book, without an overt attempt to translate the text, creating an atmospheric sound-and-image world both immersive and beautiful. Clarinets, electronics, composition: Seán Mac Erlaine Vocals: Dorothy Murphy, Georgia Cusack, Sue Rynhart and Tuula Voutilainen Film: Donal Dineen; Lighting: John Crudden; Producer: Jen Coppinger Presented with support by the Arts Council, Dublin City Council, Rough Magic Production Support and James Joyce Centre. 39 Fri 22 May Peter Carey Cré Na Cille: Tionscadal an Chadhnaigh / The Dirty Dust: The Ó Cadhain Project Bi-lingual event Date Fri 22 May Time 6pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 Date Fri 22 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre (Boy’s School) Tickets €10 / €8 “Carey can do anything” Is dóigh le cách gurb é Cré na Cille príomhúrscéal na Gaeilge. Faoin bhfód atá na carachtair ach leanann siad leo ag cabaireacht agus ag tabhairt amach an t-am ar fad, an chúlchaint chéanna a bhí ar siúl acu i dtír na mbeo. Is é atá sa seó ilmheánach dhátheangach seo ná an leagan spleodrach fódúil a rinne Alan Titley den úrscéal, The Dirty Dust, agus Graveyard Clay, leagan sofaisticiúil den úrscéal a rinne Liam Mac Con Iomaire i gcomhar le Tim Robinson agus a fhoilseofar go luath. Chum Colm Ó Snodaigh ceol le haghaidh an léirithe, míreanna a sheinnfidh sé féin. Margaret Lonergan a bheidh i mbun na n-íomhánna ar scáileán. Coimeádaí an tionscadail: Liam Carson, IMRAM Féile Litríochta Gaeilge. The Independent Peter Carey is one of only three writers to have won the Booker Prize twice. In a career spanning forty years he has turned his hand to a remarkable range of genres, from historical fiction (The True History of the Kelly Gang) to futuristic burlesque (The Unusual Life of Tristan Smith), infusing every novel with ferocious energy and wit. He talks to RTÉ Arena presenter Seán Rocks about Amnesia, his rapturously received new book, tells the story of Felix Moore, a down-at-heel journalist commissioned to write the biography of ‘Angel’, a cyber-activist on trial for unleashing a virtual ‘worm’ that throws open the doors of prisons all over the world. 40 Máirtín Ó Cadhain’s Cré na Cille is consistently ranked as the most important novel in Irish. Its characters all lie dead in the graveyard, but continue the banter, backbiting and petty gossip that characterized their lives. This multi-media bi-lingual show features brilliant English versions by Alan Titley, from his just-published translation The Dirty Dust, and by Liam Mac Con Iomaire, who has collaborated with Tim Robinson on their forthcoming version, Graveyard Clay. The show features music composed and performed by Colm Ó Snodaigh, and screen projections by Margaret Lonergan. Curated by Liam Carson, IMRAM Irish Language Literature Festival. 41 Fri 22 & Sat 23 May Irvine Welsh Eun Hee-kyung Date Fri 22 May Time 8pm Venue Liberty Hall Tickets €12 / €10 Date Sat 23 May Time 2pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets Free (booking essential) “you never know what you’re going to get with Irvine Welsh, other than guaranteed intelligence” Eun Hee-kyung is one of Korea’s most distinguished writers, long celebrated for her unique voice, sophisticated cynicism and biting humour. In a career spanning twenty years she has published three acclaimed novels and several short story collections, exploring themes such as the impossibility of true human communication. She has received many of South Korea’s highest awards, including the Yi Sang Literary Award, and with works translated into English, French, German and other languages, is rapidly gaining admirers in the West. Eun joins Martina Devlin to read from her work and explore some of the themes that inspire her. The Observer Irvine Welsh has created some of the most memorable characters in recent British fiction, including Begbie, the charismatic psychopath of Trainspotting; Bruce Robertson, the cross-dressing alcoholic police detective in Filth; and Lucy Brennan, the crazed fitness trainer of The Sex Lives of Siamese Twins. In his new novel, A Decent Ride – packed with his usual razor-sharp dialogue, black humour and zest for breaking taboos – Welsh reintroduces one of his most popular characters: ‘Juice’ Terry Lawson, the uncontrollably libidinous drug dealer, taxi driver and self-styled “gonzo porn star” first encountered in Glue, who finds himself investigating the whereabouts of a missing beauty. Welsh discusses Lawson’s return with journalist and broadcaster Sinéad Gleeson. 42 Presented by the Korean Embassy in Ireland and Literature Translation Institute of Korea in association with International Literature Festival Dublin. 43 Sat 23 May The Vagabond @ St Patrick’s Park Date Sat 23 May Time 11am – 4pm Venue St Patrick’s Park Tickets Free (booking essential) The Vagabond, Monkeyshine’s wondering venue, is coming to St Patrick’s Park, bringing with it some beautiful stories old and new. The Vagabond is a place for families to gather and enjoy some of the simple things in life: stories, music, nature and good company. Enjoy wonderfully relaxed, free family events throughout the day in the quiet heart of the city. Situated beside the impressive St. Patrick’s Cathedral, the park also boasts a children’s playground, café and literary parade. Story Weavers: Find your own Wonderland Time 11am & 3pm Join the Story Weavers as they prepare to weave a story. There’s a basket for everyone to gather inspiration and then it’s back to the Story Tent to weave a brand new story! Where might you find your own magical opening into wonderland? 44 A Retelling of Alice in Wonderland Time 1pm Gather around the hearth to hear a story inspired by Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, with live music and some beautiful surprises. This promises to be a magical experience for people of all ages. Mr Leon’s Taxi: Sarah Ardizzone Time 2pm Mr Leon, the flamboyant taxi-driver created by French illustrator Barroux, travels the world without ever leaving his home city of Paris. But, as a special favour to The Vagabond, he’s driving his taxi to Dublin. Now it’s your turn to step inside and spin us a short yarn about your own taxi ride – real or imaginary. The big question is: where are you going? Hop in and tell Mr Leon where to take you, and watch you journey being illustrated before your eyes. Presented in association with Dublin City Council Parks and Landscapes Service. 45 Sat 23 May Azar Nafisi: Anne Enright The Republic of the Imagination Date Sat 23 May Time 4pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 Date Sat 23 May Time 6pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 “her words are essential” “Anne Enright is the perfect writer for our times” In 1995 Azar Nafisi left her job as a lecturer in Tehran to become a private tutor, teaching controversial literary classics to a small group of students from her home. She turned that experience into Reading Lolita in Tehran, an uplifting exploration of the power of fiction that won a clutch of literary prizes and sold 1.5 million copies worldwide. Her latest book, The Republic of the Imagination, focuses on classic American fiction, and the imaginative freedom that great novels can provide in the twenty-first century. She discusses her writing with Selina Guinness. In January, when Anne Enright was chosen as the first Laureate for Irish Fiction, few people were surprised. Since The Portable Virgin, Enright has built a reputation as a writer of astonishing range, equally at home writing a bestselling memoir of motherhood (Making Babies), a bawdy historical novel (The Pleasures of Eliza Lynch) or a coruscating dissection of the boom years (The Forgotten Waltz). Her Man Booker Prize-winning novel The Gathering explored the grief of one family at their brother’s wake, and her new novel, The Green Road, considers another gathering of sorts, when the children of an ailing matriarch return home for a final Christmas together. Marjane Satrapi Programmed in association with Art for Amnesty. 46 Nuala Ní Chonchúir 47 Sat 23 May Anne Applebaum & Peter Pomerantsev: Bodies That Can Never Tire Faultline: Russia & Ukraine Date Sat 23 May Time 8pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €12 / €10 “[Iron Curtain is] exceptionally important, wise, perceptive, remarkably objective” Antony Beevor Date Sat 23 May Time 8pm Venue RDS Concert Hall Tickets €20 / €18 “[Nothing is True and Everything is Possible is] a riveting portrait of the new Russia” Tina Brown With relations between Russia and the West at their worst since the end of the Cold War, ILF Dublin brings together two leading writers to examine the geopolitical fault lines exposed by the crisis in Ukraine. Historian and Washington Post columnist Anne Applebaum is one of the world’s leading intellectuals and an acknowledged expert on the Soviet era. Her bestselling study Gulag: A History of the Soviet Camps won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2004 and her latest book, Iron Curtain, has been hailed as a masterpiece by reviewers. Peter Pomerantsev spent many years working as a TV producer in Moscow and his book, Nothing is True and Everything is Possible, delivers a devastating (and strangely entertaining) critique of the Putin era. 48 “That he follow with desire Bodies that can never tire” In WB Yeats’ great play, An Baile Strand, Cuchulain is asked to take an oath to defend the country. Against his will he agrees and sings the oath, including the lines above. Being half man, half god, Cuchulain himself is a ‘body that can never tire’, but in these lines Yeats focuses on the artist’s inner drive to satisfy dreams, visions and supernatural impulses. These ‘bodies that can never tire’ are different for everybody and fuel ambition, obsession and revolution. They are central to artistic creation. In celebration of Yeats’ 150 birthday, ILF Dublin presents the second of two special events inspired by Yeats’ words. Bodies That Can Never Tire gathers some of Ireland’s most remarkable figures – from community activists to hip-hop artists, social justice campaigners to poets – to explore what Yeats’ vision means to them. Featuring readings, music, poetry and dance, Bodies That Can Never Tire is a unique celebration of the legacy of Ireland’s great national poet in aid of Temple Street Children’s University Hospital. 49 Sun 24 May Sofi Oksanen Gerbrand Bakker Date Sun 24 May Time 12pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 Date Sun 24 May Time 2pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 “a literary phenomenon” “an assured and mature new voice ... in European fiction” Sofi Oksanen has long been celebrated in her native Finland. But it was her bestselling novel Purge, a dazzling tale of two generations of Estonia women grappling with Soviet occupation and the sudden freedoms of the 1990s, that shot her to international fame. She talks to award-winning Soviet historian Anne Applebaum about When the Doves Disappeared, a new novel that tells the gripping story of two cousins – principled freedom fighter Roland and slippery Edgar – whose paths cross in the 1960s, when Edgar is a communist apparatchik desperate to conceal his past. With just two novels (IMPAC-winning The Twin and The Detour, which won the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize), Dutch novelist Gerbrand Bakker has established himself as one of the leading figures in contemporary European fiction. His work – spare, unsentimental and rooted in sensory descriptions of place – often maps the territory of grief, and his new novel, June, is no exception. When Anna Kaan, grandmother of the Kaan clan, retreats into the family hayloft with a bottle of Advocaat and stubbornly refuses to come down, her protest gradually exposes the impact of one terrible day, forty years before, on three generations of lives. Bakker discusses June with journalist and broadcaster Mick Heaney. The Times 50 The Guardian 51 Sun 24 May Dermot Bolger & Christine Dwyer Hickey Deirdre Madden, Selina Guinness & Eoin McNamee: All Over Ireland – New Irish Short Stories Date Sun 24 May Time 4pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 “Christine Dwyer Hickey is as diverse and original a talent as one could hope to find” The Irish Times Date Sun 24 May Time 6pm Venue Smock Alley Theatre Tickets €10 / €8 “Bolger combines the subtlety of a poet with the artistry of a master storyteller” Joseph O’Connor This event pairs two major Irish writers whose new work explores the simmering tensions and suppressed desires of the suburbs. Dermot Bolger is one of Ireland’s best-known poets, playwrights and novelists. Tanglewood, his first novel for ten years, follows the mounting tensions in two marriages when neighbours agree to build a townhouse on shared land. To mark the launch of All Over Ireland, a new anthology of Irish short stories, ILF Dublin brings the book’s editor, Deirdre Madden, together with two contributors – author and lecturer Selina Guinness and novelist Eoin McNamee – to explore the unique challenges and opportunities of the form. The short story, VS Pritchett once said, is “exquisitely difficult” to write, yet it’s a form at which Irish writers excel. In the age of tablets and ebooks there may never have been a better time to be a short story writer, but what does it take to write a great one? The event is chaired by Stephen Matterson, professor of English at Trinity College Dublin. Acclaimed novelist and short story writer Christine Dwyer Hickey’s last work, The Cold Eye of Heaven, won the Irish Novel of the Year in 2012. Her latest, The Lives of Women, takes place in the 1970s, when suburban teenager Elaine takes her first fateful steps into the adult world. 52 53 including Kevin Barry, Anthony Cronin, Roddy Doyle, Anne Haverty, Martin Hayes, Jennifer Johnston, Neil Jordan, Patrick McCabe & Timothy O’Grady Sun 24 May Only Himself: A Tribute to Dermot Healy Date Sun 24 May Time 8pm Venue O’Reilly Theatre Tickets €15 / €12.50 When a young Dermot Healy sent some poems to Seamus Heaney, he soon received a phone call in reply. ‘Do you know how good you are?’ Heaney asked, before publishing them all. Over the next thirty years, Healy amassed an astonishing body of work celebrated for its unique voice and style: thirteen plays, five collections of poetry, an acclaimed memoir, The Bend for Home, and five novels, including A Goat’s Song, often cited as “one of the great Irish novels of recent times” (The Guardian). Dermot Healy died in June of last year, aged sixty-six. “[Dermot Healy] speaks out of a world I never knew existed ... I don’t know how he makes this world mythical, but he does” In this special tribute, Timothy O’Grady, in collaboration with ILF Dublin, gathers leading artists including Kevin Barry, Anthony Cronin, Roddy Doyle, Anne Haverty, Martin Hayes, Jennifer Johnston, Timothy O’Grady, Neil Jordan and Patrick McCabe to reflect on one of the most original voices in Irish writing. Featuring music from Martin Hayes and friends, Only Himself is a unique celebration of the writer’s life and work. Presented in association with Bealtaine and Poetry Ireland. Neil Jordan 54 55 Sat 16, Thur 21, Fri 22 & Sat 23 May Festival Club @ Oscars Café Bar Time Doors 9pm Start Performance starts 9.30pm Tickets Free (booking essential) Venue Oscars Café Bar, 16-18 Fishamble Street, Dublin 8 Anna Jordan Date Sat 16 May Anna Jordan and Dennis Cassidy have collaborated over the years on many musical ventures, but Selk is the first time they have worked together solely as a two piece. With Cassidy the anchor man and drummer of Dublin’s jazz and hip-hop collective Mixtapes from the Underground and Jordan a unique vocalist and lyricist, the results are apart from much of what you’ll hear elsewhere in the country at the moment. Dylan Tighe Date Fri 22 May “an exquisite songwriter” The Irish Times Playwright, actor, musician: there’s not much Dylan Tighe can’t do, and few people were surprised last year when his debut album, Record, was met with a chorus of acclaim. Tighe’s assured songwriting encompasses everything from acoustic numbers to experimental soundscapes, all tied together by his hushed, warm vocals and dark lyrics. His live performances have earned rapturous receptions everywhere from the Liverpool Philharmonic to the Irish Arts Centre in New York. Followed by a dj set from Siobhán Kane. Isobel Anderson Lyrical Ballads with Nialler9 Since the release of her debut album in 2010, Isobel Anderson has been carving out a distinctive career with intimate folk songs whose gentle melodies belie lyrics with real bite. Her albums have attracted an illustrious following, including Lauren Laverne and Jamie Cullum, and she has performed live everywhere from Glastonbury to Belfast’s Open House Music Festival. Followed by a dj set from Billy O Hanluain. Good songwriting isn’t just about the tune, it’s about the lyrics as well but, too often, today’s bands find their music let down by their words: unfortunate combinations of the obvious, the clichéd and the absurd. In this unique event for ILF Dublin, celebrated dj Nialler9 introduces some of his favourite bands whose turn of phrase is as sharp and compelling as their tunes. Interspersed with dj sets from Nialler9 himself, Lyrical Ballads is a unique celebration of the songwriter’s craft. Date Thur 21 May 56 Date Sat 23 May 57 Date Sat 16 May Time 10am – 5pm Craft of Fiction Seminars Venue Belvedere House Tickets €50 Last year, our Date With An Agent initiative drew submissions from talented writers all over the world and culminated in an information-packed event at Dublin Castle. This year – again in association with The Inkwell Group and Writing.ie – Ireland’s largest ever literary talent-spotting initiative returns, poised to discover the stars of the future. We’re looking for 75 aspiring writers who will pitch their work to one of five leading literary agents, but this year we also have a limited number of tickets available to the rest of the day for writers not yet ready to pitch or who just want to find out more about how the business works. With an agent panel, an editor author discussion and an editorial panel, as well as Vanessa Fox O’Loughlin discussing what to submit, how and who too, if you want to get published this is a not-to-be-missed opportunity. Participating agents: Simon Trewin, Partner and Head of Literary at WME London; Clare Wallace, Literary Agent at Darley Anderson Literary, TV and Film Agency; Sallyanne Sweeney Literary Agent at Mulcahy Associates, London; Julia Churchill, Literary Agent at AM Heath, London and Paul Feldstein of The Feldstein Agency. Running Order 9.30 Registration 10.00 – 11.30 Agent Panel with Q&A 11.30 Coffee Break 12.00 Pitching begins 12.00 – 13.30 Vanessa Fox O’Loughlin on Getting Published 13.30 – 14.30 Lunch 14.40 – 15.40 Mary Costello in conversation with Francis Bickmore Chair: Vanessa Fox O’Loughlin 15.45 – 16.45 Editorial Panel: Patricia Deevy of Penguin Random House and Paula Campbell of Poolbeg Press discuss what editors are looking for and how to increase your chances of success 16.45 Wrap up 17.00 Finish Date Sat 16 May Time 10.30am – 1.30pm Venue Irish Writers Centre Tickets €20 / €18* Sat 16 & Thur 21 May Date with an Agent These back-to-back seminars, aimed at seasoned writers and curious readers, will get to the heart of crafting fiction. Christine Montalbetti and one other author will each deliver a one-hour lecture on different aspects of writing; aspects they feel play a strong role in their work, be it character development, plot, dialogue or pace. The seminars are designed to enlighten emerging writers and enrich technical aspects of their work, giving all writers present a chance to soak up the authors’ knowledge and experience. Each lecture will be followed by a brief Q&A. Second Book Syndrome with Kathleen MacMahon, Liz McManus & Donal Ryan Date Thur 21 May Time 7.30pm Venue Irish Writers Centre Tickets €10 / €8* The book industry loves a debut novelist; the thrill in finding that fresh new voice. But what happens when the sheen of first fiction wears off and the pressure is on to draft a novel to rival, or even better, the first? Broadcaster Pat Kenny talks to Kathleen MacMahon, Liz McManus and Donal Ryan about the challenges of publishing that second manuscript. Kathleen MacMahon’s second novel, her follow-up to This is How it Ends, is being released this summer; 23 years have passed between Liz McManus’ first and second novels; and award-winning author Donal Ryan famously had his second manuscript published ahead of his first. * To book tickets for these events please visit www.irishwriterscentre.ie 58 59 Irish Writers Centre supported by WORDS Ireland Date Sat 23 May Time 10.30am – 4.30pm Venue Irish Writers Centre Tickets €60 / €50* Fri 22 & Sat 23 May Mindshift: The Connected Writer – Getting the Gig, Doing it Well This professional development day, supported by WORDS Ireland and aimed at established writers, will help you to improve your skillset for readings, panel discussions and interviews, and to connect with – and even wow – audiences. Diversity in Children’s Literature with Sarah Ardizzone, Siobhan Parkinson, Bali Rai & Alexandra Strick Date Fri 22 May Time 11am – 1pm Venue The Ark Tickets €5 Diversity can be explored from many angles. In this special event, we explore ways to support excellence in children’s literature, while broadening our perspective on how children and cultures are represented. Siobhan Parkinson is an award-winning Irish writer/translator, publisher (Little Island) and former Laureate na nÓg. Sarah Ardizzone is an award-winning translator, festival curator and journalist reporting on multicultural and multilingual issues. Raised in a Punjabi household in Leicester, author Bali Rai writes about teenage lives in multicultural, multi-racial communities in inner-city Britain. Alexandra Strick is a consultant in books and disability issues. She is co-founder of Outside in World (the UK organisation dedicated to books from around the world) and Inclusive Minds. Presented in association with Children’s Books Ireland. 60 Sarah Webb (writer and Children’s Curator of Mountains to Sea Book Festival), Martin Colthorpe (International Literature Festival Dublin) and Keith Acheson (Belfast Book Festival) discuss knowing your USPs, connecting with curators, and ‘getting out there’. Doireann Ní Bhriain tackles preparation for the gig and onstage presence, while Martina Devlin looks at maintaining momentum. *To book tickets for this event please visit www.irishwriterscentre.ie Writing Art Criticism with Paper Visual Art Journal (PVA) Date Sat 23 May Time 10am – 5pm Venue LAB Art Gallery Tickets Free (booking essential) This is the first of two day-long workshops at the Lab on writing art criticism, the second of which will take place on Saturday 20th June. Led by PVA editors and art critics Nathan O’Donnell and Marysia Wieckiewicz-Carroll, these workshops will combine theory and practice, including reading and discussion sessions as well as creative writing exercises. Participants will be encouraged to engage as critics with the two exhibitions on show at the Lab. These will be open and welcoming sessions, exploring some of the major questions facing the writer on visual art. 61 City Dreams with Bali Rai Venue The Ark Tickets €5 / €4.50 (booking required, contact [email protected]) Date Thur 21 May Time 10.15am Venue Central Library (ILAC Centre) Petr Horácek: The Mouse who ate the Moon Date Mon 18 May Time 10.15am & 11.30am Class Jnr & Snr Infants Class 5th – 6th All bookings for library events arranged locally Mon 18 & Wed 20 May School Events @ The Ark Bali Rai is an award-winning author of books for children and teenagers about teenage lives in multicultural, inner-city Britain. Join him as he talks about what an author goes through to write novels, the creative process and his passion for Liverpool FC (but we won’t hold that against him!). Peep through the cut-out holes in this beautiful and heart-warming tale from the award-winning Petr Horáček. After the reading, children can make their own little books to take home. Rumble with the Romans: Gary Northfield Date Mon 18 May Time 11.15am Class 3rd & 4th Join Julius Zebra and his motley menagerie of friends as they gear up to be gladiators in this fun-packed event with celebrated cartoonist Gary Northfield (creator of The Beano’s Derek the Sheep). Once Upon an If Date Wed 20 May Time 11.15am Class 3rd – 6th A highly interactive workshop using telepathy, magic necklaces and shrinking machines! Peter Worley takes his young audience on a number of short philosophical adventures, but don’t worry: they’ll come back in one piece! 62 Killer Cats and Crummy Mummies: Anne Fine Date Thur 21 May Time 10.30am Venue Pearse Street Library Conference Room Class 3rd – 5th All bookings for library events arranged locally Longlisted for a UKLA Book Award 2015, On Planet Fruitcake is the latest book from award-winning author (and former UK Children’s Laureate) Anne Fine. Join her as she talks about her work and where she gets her ideas 63 Thanks International Literature Festival Dublin is a programme of the City Arts Office, part of the Culture, Community & Recreation Department of Dublin City Council (Chief Executive Owen P. Keegan, Assistant Chief Executive Brendan Kenny). The work of the Arts Office is made possible by the support of the Lord Mayor of Dublin, Christy Burke, and the members of Dublin City Council. Noel Hayes, Ursula Donnellan, Michael Noonan, Leo Fitzpatrick, Ross Styles, Mary Weir: Dublin City Council. Sarah Bannon, Members & Executives of the Arts Council. Elaina Ryan & Aoife Murray: Children’s Books Ireland. Jane Alger, Elizabeth Cuddy: Dublin UNESCO City of Literature. Terry Wogan, Mary McLaughlin & all the team: Dublin City Libraries. Bill Shipsey. Claire Looby, Laurence Macken: The Irish Times. Aisling O’Gorman & Mitzi D’Alton: The Ark. Cormac Kinsella: Repforce Publicity. Declan Heeney: Gill Hess Ltd. Maureen Kennelly & Jane O’Hanlon: Poetry Ireland. Valerie Bistany, Amy Herron & Brendan MacEvilly: Irish Writers Centre. Lorraine Allis & Anne McKiernan: Brooks Hotel. Amy O’Hanlon: Fringe Festival. Cliona Dukes & all the team at Smock Alley Theatre. Liz Kelly: Age & Opportunity. Sinéad Gleeson. Vanessa O’Loughlin: Writing.ie. Darragh Doyle. Ju Yearn Sun: Embassy of the Republic of Korea. Barbara Ebert: Goethe-Institut Ireland. Ralf Hospodarsky: Austrian Embassy. Norbert Arnold & Deirdre Sweeney: Embassy of Switzerland in Ireland. Nicky Childs: Arts Admin UK. Discover Story Centre. Irma Grothuis. Emma Worley. The Philosophy Foundation. Kate McBride. Laura McNaughton. Sheena Barrett. Jen Coppinger. Liam Carson: IMRAM. Timothy O’Grady. Clare Fox. Iida Simes: Finnish PEN. Stephanie Muchint: Embassy of France in Ireland. Una Carmody. Gillian Clarke. Iseult Byrne. Julia Carruthers & Carina McGrail: Dublin Dance Festival. Ronan Flood: Oscar Café Bar. 4 Star Boutique Hotel, two minutes walk from Grafton Street Offical Host Hotel to the International Literary Festival of Dublin Discover the Difference at Brooks Hotel Brooks Private Cinema Hosts movie nights forthnightly Whiskey Tasting Sessions at Jasmine Bar Francesca’s Restaurant featuring an innovative irish menu Executive Director Ray Yeates General Manager Aimée van Wylick Design & Website Zinc Programme Director Martin Colthorpe Administration Vicky Kearney Catherine Neville Maura Carty Copywriter Alistair Daniel Family & Children’s Programmer Sinéad Connolly Marketing Assistant Caoimhe Connolly PR Kate Bowe PR Ltd. Photographer Michael Nolan “Brooks exemplifies the hotel-ness of an hotel, offering not just a welcome, but a real sense of well-being” McKenna's Guides Brooks Hotel, Drury Street, Dublin 2. Tel: 01 670 4000 Email: [email protected] www.brookshotel.ie We would like to thank our 2015... Festival Bookseller Festival Host Hotel Principal Funders & Partners Festival Cultural Partners Media Partner Children's Books Ireland Leabhair Pháistí Éireann Publishers Pantone Colours Atlantic HarperCollins Publishers Penguin Ireland Canongate Little, Brown Phoenix Yard Books Bloomsbury Education Crown House Publishing Dalkey Archive Press Egmont Publishing Faber & Faber The Gallery Press Hodder & Stoughton Little Island New Island Books The O’Brien Press Pan Macmillan Penguin Books UK Pantone Red 032 c Pantone 3005 c Pantone 116 c Pantone 376 c Penguin Random House Scholastic Serpent’s Tail Tramp Press Walker Books Supporters Festival Venue Partners CMYK Colours Red C-0 / M-90 / Y-86 / K-0 Blue C-100 / M-34 / Y-0 / K-2 Yellow C-0 / M-16/ Y-100 / K-o Green C-50 / M-0 / Y-100 / K-0 Festival Network Supplier Get the best from your week YO U A R E W H AT YO U R E A D CULTUREFOX.IE NEVER MISS OUT The Arts Council’s new, upgraded CULTUREFOX events guide is now live. Free, faster, easy to use – and personalised for you. Never miss out again. InternationalLiterature LiteratureFestival FestivalDublin Dublin2015 2015May May16–24 16–24 International ilfdublin.com You complete the story International Literature Festival Dublin 2015 May 16–24 ilfdublin.com