Saturday, January 11, 2014

Southernmost Point



I am delighted to be included in Southernmost Point Guest House, an anthology of poetry from the same publisher as New Short Stories and funded by profits from the Willesden Herald Short Story Competition. Many thanks to Stephen Moran for inviting me to contribute. The cover itself is deserving of a poem and the title is taken a poem by Alex Barr
 
This collection brings together poetry by writers currently living in America, Britain, Ireland, Italy and New Zealand. They have little in common other than finding themselves here, in this book and in the early part of the 21st century, with something to say. 

So I am particularly  pleased to be between covers with:  Stephen Moran,  Nuala Ní Chonchúir, Alex Barr, Andrew Mayne, Charles Lambert, David Cooke,James Browning Kepple, Judi Sutherland, Kim Göransson, Laura Lee, Lee Webber, Lynn Blackadder, Lynsey Rose, Mikey Delgado, Raewyn Alexander, Richard Peabody, Sean Brijbasi, Susan Campbell, Tim Craven, Vanessa Gebbie. 
It is available from:

 
 

Friday, December 6, 2013

Hellkite Launched

Thank you to all who made the launch of Hellkite in Dublin and Galway such a huge success.  Fellow writers, Vivienne McKechnie; Mary Turley-McGrath and Geraldine Mitchell
John and Vivienne with writer, Gerry Boland

With writer Aoife Casby


Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Dublin Launch of Hellkite




ARLEN HOUSE warmly invites you to celebrate the launch of  my new short fiction collection HELLKITE  on 
Wednesday 4 December at 6.00pm
Venue: Dublin City Library and Archive
138-144 Pearse Street
Dublin 2

RSVP: Alan Hayes, Publisher, Arlen House. Phone 086 8207617; Email: arlenhouse@gmail.com

Sunday, October 13, 2013

This Street with Looking-glass Eyes

                                         Photo: Peter Moore

This Street with Looking Glass Eyes


‘Bring me back great stories,’ Andrew’s sister says. She is sitting up in bed her arms clasped around her knees, blue eyes waiting for him to sweep them clean of any dreams. ‘Bring me back a big slice of the city in your rucksack.’
‘With or without pepperoni,’ he jokes. Then he leans over, kisses her cheek and picks up his keys. He files away the tall order she has presented him with and head out the door, pulling his parka more tightly around him as he hits the cutting air. He makes his way along the street. People are already moving in and out of the day. He heads towards the shops, walks by the square where the homeless are scavenging the bins of the homed. They pull out chicken bones, empty pockets of pita bread; upend a can of coke to see if it still has a dreg of sugar left inside. He burrows his way through the aisles of the supermarket; buys what’s needed to keep flesh under their skin and heads back to where she is waiting for him. How thin his sister, how very sad her eyes.
‘What have you brought me?’ she enquires.
‘A bowl of fresh morning air.’
He curves his hands and holds them to her face. She feels the cold of the new day on his fingers and caresses them before she secrets her own back under the duvet.
            He sets up a tray for her, cheese from the new cheesemongers, bread still smelling of the oven it was saved from, some wild acacia honey. He takes out a fresh napkin depicting a scene of girls and bridges and blue weeping willow, tucks it under her chin.
‘My very own restaurant,’ she says, as she plays with dripping bee sweetness onto the bread, moves it around the plate he has placed before her. Stocks and shares fall on the other side of the city. Mortgages default. Businesses fold in on themselves while she cuts the bread into little cubes; stacks them into columns three squares high, playing with them like a child; pretends she doesn’t see his frown, his threats if she doesn’t eat. She knows that she is pushing her luck with him
Finally she takes a mouse-bite out of the wheaten loaf. 
‘Where are my stories?’ she demands, lifting the napkin to brush crumbs from her mouth. So he tells her, embellishes the things he has seen on his domestic expedition. How there were archaeologists excavating ruins near the top of the square. A woman in a high-vis jacket was sweeping soil from the bones of an ancient bird with a small paint brush while a man numbered shards of plates that still held a tracery of leaves and vines. Another turned to a collection of battered drinking vessels with the memory of some magic potion. Some day it would teach the world to sing. 
‘All those things you can see in a single trip,’ she says.
‘It’s simple,’ he replies. ‘All you have to do is look.’

 Extract from forthcoming short story collection: Hellkite

Saturday, October 5, 2013

Me and Nu at Coole Park Autumn Gathering

                                                            Photo: Peter Moore


As part of The Lady Gregory Autumn Gathering, which this year is celebrating Irish Women Writers,  Hedy Gibbons-Lynott and I  are  performing a kitchen reading of Me and Nu by Anne Gregory, as well as our own work tomorrow, Sunday 6th October. Many thanks to Marion Cox for inviting us. A day that is packed with inspiring events, times and venues are as follows.


10.30 The End of the Cycle: Lady Gregory and Yeats ‘A Vision’ Prof. Meg Harper, Glucksman Chair in Contemporary Writing in English, University of Limerick.
Venue: Coole Park Visitor Centre

11.15 Coffee Coole Park Visitor Centre

11.45 Strange Encounters – Interactive Ghost Stories & Strange Tales from Lady Gregory’s ‘Visions and Beliefs in the West of Ireland’
Dr. Cecily O’Neill, Author and International Authority on Drama and Arts Education
 Venue: Coole Park Visitor Centre

12.30 Coole Connections- a personal encounter with Lady Gregory and Coole
Hedy Gibbons-Lynott, Award-winning writer
Venue: Coole Park Visitor Centre

14.30 Me & Nu – A Kitchen Reading
Hedy Gibbons-Lynott and Geraldine Mills
The Gate Lodge, Coole Park

15.30 Out of Old Stories
Geraldine Mills, Poet & Short-story Writer
 The Gate Lodge, Coole Park

20.00 Lady Gregory’s Ingredients
A three woman play depicting the life of Lady Gregory
The Wild Swan Theatre Group
The Town Hall, Gort


Monday 7th October 2013
10.00 Creative Writing Think Tank (2 hrs) Gort Public Library
Yvonne Cullen, Creative Writing Workshop Facilitator

13.00 Literary Lunch with acclaimed Local Writers. Hedy and I will be there too.
 The Gallery Café

15.30 Book Launch: Spirit of the Burren  by Jackie Queally
 Gort Public Library

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Culture Night Reading


Lisa, Moya and I will be reading in Spiddal Library as part of  Culture Night. It's at 7.00pm the perfect time between other events so why not come along; it would be great to see you there.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

A taste of my forthcoming collection Hellkite

From Frost Heave:


                                          Photo: Genevieve Hystad


He followed all her actions on Facebook. The whole world knew about her white-water rafting and the cycling, as well as driving her truck into great hills of snow. She was smiling out at him, holding up a snow rake that had precipitated a roof avalanche on top of her. Covered in white and laughing. He could imagine the snow that found its way down behind her scarf, melting as it touched the heat of her neck. She was pontificating about frost heaves as if she had never heard of potholes. She hadn’t realised, until she was where other people were, that this was where she wanted to be, she told anyone and everyone who bothered to read what she wrote.
Sounds wonderful, Gretta.
Wish I could be you, Gretta.
           That’s some man you’ve got there, Girl.
He could see her in the General Store, with its good old-fashioned charm. She was one of ‘the communidy’ now. The t softened to d, letting go of her own tongue to suck on someone else’s. Boars-head meat beside favourite frozen novelties. Walking in, being greeted by Barbara behind the counter. How rage boiled up in him. Lee Saoul playing her guitar over the soft rustle of newspapers as people turned them over and filled their coffee cups again, called out to her. A pan in the kitchen being scraped and potatoes mashed while she bought pastrami on rye, linguica, corned beef hash for her Tom. At least he wasn’t called Bud. Bud would have killed him entirely. That name opening up to her petal by petal. Sitting in the front yard on a love seat, a fucking loveseat with his square jaw and his hair streaked back, a cold beer, full-fitting jeans; blue jays in the trees.
She posted up pictures of their sugar house. Night temperatures cold enough to send the sap rushing back down the bole of the tree, followed by a warm day that drew it right up again. The two of them in their big, red ass pick-up as they drove out to the sugar bush, striking it while the sap was running, boring into the trees, the spigot drip, drip into the pail, bucket, whatever she called it now. All day and night the stove fed with kindling as they boiled off the water, reducing it all to sweetness. Bleeding sweetness out of the sugar bush as if she were born to it. Drinking in all its sickening sap.
Could she not have waited for his sugar time, good old promises between her lips, instead of packing up and taking the bus to the airport, fuck-friend waiting for her at the other end with his Shiloh Sharps.