POPULARITY
Wenn die Folge rauskommt, sind wir mit etwas ganz anderem beschäftigt als dem Podcast: das neue Extension Pack „Growing Together“ für die Sims 4 ist rausgekommen. Wir machen einen deep dive in die neue Welt, Toddler bzw. generell gameplay mit Kindern in den Sims. Natürlich haben wir bereits YouTube Videos dazu geschaut, auch die werden heute besprochen. ERWÄHNUNGEN: Everything Coming in The Sims 4: Growing Together - https://youtube.com/watch?v=hcqw6h02nQE BUCHEMPFEHLUNGEN: Nele Pollatschek „Dear Oxbridge“ (2020, Galiani Berlin) - https://tidd.ly/3laCxzT * Mona Eltahawy „The Seven Necessary Sins For Women And Girls“ (2021, Tramp Press) - https://tidd.ly/3yE7tvs * HIER FINDET IHR UNS: YouTube Kanal - https://bit.ly/3gZPoQp Buchempfehlungen - https://bit.ly/2Z7wb9r Playlist - https://spoti.fi/3xqGwf1 Kat - https://instagram.com/katcomatose Zora - https://instagram.com/ichbinszora Spotify Bewertung - https://spoti.fi/3CvfClu Apple Bewertung - https://apple.co/2NX1rBW Email-Kontakt: londoncallingpodcast (at) googlemail (dot) com *Affiliate Link (Thalia)
Sophie White talks about Stephen King, Nuala O'Faolain, and Marian Keyes, exploring why she is drawn to horror stories, the choppy waters of motherhood, and much more besides, as she chooses the books she would save if her house was on fire. Sophie White is a writer and podcaster from Dublin. She is the author of several books, including the recent highly acclaimed Corpsing: My Body and Other Horror Shows (2021), and Where I End (2022), both published by Tramp Press.
Sara Baume is unafraid to use her own life in her writing, while insisting on its status as fiction. She does it again in her new book Seven Steeples, a gentle and thought-provoking novel spanning seven years. It's about a couple and their two rescue dogs who drop off the radar and live a quiet life doing as little harm to the planet as possible. “Everything I write is always an extremity of my actual existence. It's sort of like a smudged out version of us, I suppose,” says Sara, who moved to the countryside 11 years ago and currently lives with her partner in West Cork. She also works as a visual artist and describes the deep sense of satisfaction she gains from working with her hands, whether on patchwork flags or wooden birds or tiny ships. Seven Steeples by Sara Baume is published by Tramp Press https://tramppress.com/product/seven-steeples/
This month we speak to writer and artist Sara Baume. Sara is the author of Spill Simmer Falter Wither (2015), A Line Made by Walking (2017), the non-fiction handiwork (2020) and Seven Steeples, which is released this month on Tramp Press, who have published all of her work so far. Amongst much else, we cover: living a creative life that combines writing and visual art; learning narrative from arthouse cinema; finding a form from the original idea; writing slowly; abandoning work that doesn't feel right. Sara's Instagram is: @saraofthebaumes Sara's books are available directly from Tramp Press: https://tramppress.com/writer/sara-baume/ or through Bookshop: https://uk.bookshop.org/contributors/sara-baume - or your local bricks and mortar book shop... Find us on Twitter: @UnsoundMethods - @JaimieBatchan - @LochlanBloom Jaimie's Instagram is: @jaimie_batchan We have a store page on Bookshop, where you can find our books, as well as those of previous guests: https://uk.bookshop.org/shop/unsoundmethods Thanks for listening, please like, subscribe and rate Unsound Methods wherever you get your podcasts. Our website is: https://unsoundmethods.co.uk/
Das "weiter lesen"-Team präsentiert einen bunt gemischten Büchertisch. Von Roman bis Lyrik zu Sachbuch, Graphic Novel und Bildband ist alles dabei. Auch thematisch sind unsere ganz persönlichen Büchertipps zur Weihnachtszeit so vielfältig wie das Leben selbst: Wir sprechen über den Fall Woyzeck, über die Generation Slim Fit in der Politik, über die erste große Liebe im Berlin der Achtziger Jahre, über die Neue Nationalgalerie und über den Dialog zwischen einem Tiefkühlschrank und einem Eiswürfel… Als "Special Guest" ist die Schweizer Lyrikerin Eva Maria Leuenberger dabei. Sie stellt literarische Entdeckungen aus dem englischsprachigen Raum vor. In dieser Sonderausgabe von "weiter lesen" – der Koproduktion von rbbKultur und dem Literarischen Colloquium Berlin – geht es auch um die schönste Nebensache der Welt: das Lesen natürlich! Natascha Freundel empfiehlt: Ulrich Peltzer: "Das bist du", S. Fischer Verlag, 288 Seiten, 22,00 Euro Adam Nicolson: "Der Ruf des Seevogels", Liebeskind 2021, 368 Seiten, 36,00 Euro Donatella Di Cesare: "Philosophie der Migration", Matthes & Seitz 2021, 343 Seiten, 26,00 Euro Thomas Geiger empfiehlt: Steve Sem-Sandberg: "W.", Klett Cotta 2021, 416 Seiten, 25,00 Euro Helmut Böttiger: "Die Jahre der wahren Empfindung", Wallstein Verlag 2021, 473 Seiten, 32,00 Euro Michael Wesely: "Neue Nationalgalerie 160401-201209", Hatje-Crantz 2021, 224 Seiten, 50,00 Euro Eva Maria Leuenberger empfiehlt: Doireann Ní Ghríofa: "Ghost in the Throat", Tramp Press 2020, 224 Seiten, 12,74 Euro Mattilda Bernstein Sycamore: "The Freezer Door", Semiotext(e) 2020, 280 Seiten, Preis variiert CAConrad: "While Standing in Line for Death", Wave Books 2017, 160 S., 18,27 Euro Thorsten Dönges empfiehlt: Elias Hirschl: "Salonfähig", Roman, Zsolnay, 256 Seiten, 22,00 Euro Frédéric Ciriez/Romain Lamy: "Frantz Fanon", Graphic Novel, Hamburger Edition Mittelweg 36, 232 Seiten, vierfarbig, 25,00 Euro Ronya Othman: "Die Verbrechen", Gedichte, Hanser, 112 Seiten, 20,00 Euro Mehr Infos unter www.rbbkultur.de/weiterlesen
Do you enjoy reading ghost stories alone at night? Have you ever binged an entire true crime series? Or do you unwind watching horror films like The Exorcist, or reading the supernatural novels of Stephen King? The Dublin Gothic Podcast is a series looking at the intersection between art, psychology, folklore, architecture, natural history and Ireland's urban gothic writing.Vampires, ghosts, and the undead have an enduring cultural legacy. These uncanny figures inform, or perhaps infect, depictions of the body, maternity, and sexuality in contemporary Irish women's writing. This panel discussion, recorded live in MoLI's Old Physics Theatre, led by Dr Katie Mishler and featuring Sarah Davis-Goff, Doireann Ní Ghríofa, and Sophie White, uncovers how the gothic monstrosities of Bram Stoker and others continue to be a powerful metaphor for social anxieties, marginalisation, and historical erasure. Sarah Davis-Goff is co-founder of Tramp Press, which publishes the Recovered Voices series, re-publishing a lost Irish classic once a year, with a bent towards speculative fiction. In 2019 her own novel Last Ones Left Alive was published in the UK and Ireland by Tinder Press, and in the US by Flatiron. Last Ones Left Alive was nominated for the Edinburgh First Book Prize and the Not-The-Booker Prize, shortlisted for an Irish Book Award and the Kate O'Brien Award, and won the Chrysalis Award. She lives in Dublin. Doireann Ní Ghríofa is a poet and essayist. Her prose début A Ghost in the Throat was awarded the James Tait Back Prize for Biography, and described as “powerful” (New York Times), and “captivatingly original” (The Guardian). Doireann is also author of six critically-acclaimed books of poetry, each a deepening exploration of birth, death, desire, and domesticity. Sophie White is a writer and podcaster from Dublin. Her first book, a memoir-cookbook work, Recipes for a Nervous Breakdown (Gill 2016) was shortlisted for the Irish Book Awards. Her second book and first novel, the bestselling, Filter This (Hachette, 2019) was also shortlisted for the Irish Book Awards. Her third book, Unfiltered (Hachette, 2020) was described by Marian Keyes as ‘such fun – gas, clever stuff'. Her fourth book and second work of non-fiction is the bestselling essay collection, Corpsing: My Body and Other Horror Shows published by Tramp Press in 2021.Dr Katie Mishler is an Irish Research Council Enterprise Partnership Postdoctoral Fellow (2020-2022) in collaboration with the UCD Centre for Cultural Analytics and Museum of Literature Ireland (MoLI). Her current project, Mapping Gothic Dublin: 1820-1900, researches the relationship between Dublin's urban history and the development of Ireland's literary gothic tradition. The research for this podcast is supported by Dr Mishler's postdoctoral project Mapping Gothic Dublin: 1820-1900, funded by an Irish Research Council Enterprise Partnership Fellowship.Producers Ian Dunphy & Benedict Schlepper-ConnollySound Ian DunphyMusic CAPE
Today, in the last podcast in the current season, Enda Wyley talks to Aoife Lyall about her debut collection Mother Nature, published by Bloodaxe Books. Aoife's Toaster Challenge Choice is A Line Made by Walking by Sara Baume, published by Tramp Press in 2017.And Books for Breakfast co-host Peter Sirr talks about his Intimate City: Dublin Essays, just published by Gallery Press.Intro/outro music: Colm Mac Con Iomaire, ‘Thou Shalt Not Carry' from The Hare's Corner, 2008, with thanks to Colm for permission to use it.Artwork by Freya SirrTo subscribe to Books for Breakfast go to your podcast provider of choice (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google etc) and search for the podcast then hit subscribe or follow, or simply click the appropriate button above. Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/books4breakfast)
(CN: Heathers is a dark movie that deals with suicide, murder, homophobia, fatphobia, and eating disorders. We discuss all of those things in this episode so if you need to skip this one we get it.) Sophie White of The Creep Dive and Mother Of Pod returns to Juvenalia to talk about the extremely dark 1989 horror comedy Heathers. We talk about the chemistry of Winona Ryder and Christian Slater, how dark, dark, super dark this film, how it’s still funny though, about the disastrous 2018 TV reboot, the wonderful music, and about dark teen comedies in general. Sophie White is @sophwhitewhoop on instagram. Her amazing new book Corpsing: My Body And Other Horror Stories is out now on Tramp Press. Alan is @alan_maguire. Juvenalia is his main thing right now. Andrea is no longer on social media but you can find her on the Nialler9 Podcast and at her wonderful newsletter at andreacleary.substack.com Thank you to Dee McDonnell for our artwork. We have a Patreon! You can get bonus episodes and free lil bits of merch. It's patreon.com/juvenalia Juvenalia is a Tall Tales podcast. Thank you Cassie.
At the end of February, the CSO released the 2020 baby name statistics and after a long run, Emily is no longer the top girl name in Ireland. How should we interpret this? What does it mean for existing Emilys, especially the ones who rejoiced in the name before it became so popular in the noughties? Grace is the new top name, but how much of that is a global anglophone phenomenon and how much it is linked to its Irish associations - Grace Gifford and the song that bears her name, for example? And what about Fiadh, the breakthrough Irish language name of the last decade - what kicked that off? In this week's episode, Darach, Gearóidín and Peadar discuss the latest baby name stats and try to get to the bottom of it all. We hear from an Emily (@EmilyAM) who describes the process of watching one's name go from unique to ubiquitous. We hear from Sophie and Jen of the Mother of Pod podcast about the considerations when picking names. And we hear about Peadar's dirty secret. Check out Sophie White's new book "Corpsed" published by Tramp Press. --- Support Motherfocloir on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/darach Get Kirsten Shiel art prints here: https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/kirstenshiel/ --- Contact the show: whatsapp - +353894784713 (https://wa.me/353894784713) twitter - @motherfocloir and @theirishfor email - motherfocloir@headstuff.org (mailto:motherfocloir@headstuff.org) --- Want to record your own podcast? Check out our studios at https://thepodcaststudios.ie Or do it online at https://remotely.fm/?coddle
Jessie Bray Sharpin reviews her favourite reads from last year: A Ghost in the Throat by Doireann NÃ GhrÃofa (Tramp Press), How Much of These Hills is Gold by C. Pam Zhang (Little, Brown Book Group), and We Ride Upon Sticks by Quin Barry (Pantheon Books).
Jessie Bray Sharpin reviews her favourite reads from last year: A Ghost in the Throat by Doireann NÃ GhrÃofa (Tramp Press), How Much of These Hills is Gold by C. Pam Zhang (Little, Brown Book Group), and We Ride Upon Sticks by Quin Barry (Pantheon Books).
To support our work and listen to additional content from previous episodes, see here: https://patreon.com/yourshelf and follow us on social media @_yourshelf_ (note: there is no Patreon episode for either of our Books of the Year 2020 episodes). In our latest, eleventh episode of The YourShelf Podcast, Prose Book of the Year 2020, our chief curator Juliano Zaffino (Jay) catches up with Doireann Ní Ghríofa to discuss Doireann's book A Ghost In The Throat, the life of Eibhlín Dubh Ní Chonaill, Dubh's poem Caoineadh Airt Uí Laoghaire which survives in the Irish oral tradition, motherhood, voices, astonishment, Doireann's forthcoming bilingual collection of poetry (due spring 2021), and a recap of the best books of 2020. For full show notes, see here: https://podcast.yourshelf.uk/episodes/11. Thanks for listening.LinksPatreonInstagramTwitterPodcastYourShelfEpisode NotesJay asks Doireann about the books that made her, what her bookshelves look like, and what book she'd send backwards in time if she could. (from 0:01)Doireann explains the origins of her book A Ghost In The Throat, her poetry work including (in English) Clasp and Lies (a bilingual publication), the life and work of Eibhlín Dubh Ní Chonaill, astonishment, engineering the breath in the white space on the page, and more. (from 11:40)Doireann recaps her favourite books and TV shows of 2020, recommends some titles for 2021, and muses on what's next from her. (from 54:20)Doireann gives a special reading of a passage from A Ghost In The Throat. (from 1:12:23)The books and authors discussed in this episode include: the work of Edmund Lenihan, the artist Dorothy Cross' Montenotte, Tramp Press' 'Recovered Voices' series, Lucy Ellmann's Ducks, Newburyport, Max Porter's Grief Is The Thing With Feathers, and Han Kang's The White Book.Doireann's 2020 highlights include Sara Baume's handiwork, Celia Paul's Self-Portrait, Ella Frears' Shine, Darling, Seán Hewitt's Tongues of Fire, Mark O'Connell's Notes from an Apocalypse, and Janet Malcolm's The Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes. Aside from books, Doireann also recommends repeatedly rewatching the 2017 film The Meyerowitz Stories, and the 2020 TV series The Queen's Gambit and Ratched.Doireann's most anticipated releases of 2021 include Megan Nolan's Acts of Desperation and Kerri Ní Dochartaigh's Thin Places.Doireann's book A Ghost In The Throat is available now from Tramp Press. Her poetry collections Clasp and Lies are available now from Dedalus Press. Her next collection is forthcoming in Spring 2021.Thanks for listening and tune in again soon for new episodes embracing all the books 2021 has to offer.
In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Doireann Ní Ghríofa about an essay she wrote called The Dissection Room, which first appeared in NUMBER 73, the WINTER 2018 issue of The Dublin Review. Doireann writes in English and Irish, she has published six collections of poetry. In 2016, she was awarded the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. She is a member of Aosdána. In August 2020, Tramp Press published her debut collection of prose called A Ghost in the Throat.
Podcasters are not allowed to have favourites, but if Darren Lee did, it would be this episode with Jack Fennell in which the pair discuss science fiction, most notably A BRILLIANT VOID - the book of Irish Sci-Fi that Jack curated for Tramp Press. It was Darren's book of 2018 and is well worth checking out (Episode recorded early 2019)
There was good news this week for Irish author, Louise Nealon as she’s received a six figure deal for her coming of age novel. But what about publishing during the pandemic? How do you get attention when book fairs and tours have been cancelled? We’re joined by literary agent Marianne Gunn O’Connor and Lisa Coen of Tramp Press.
Keywords is brand new series presented by Zoë Comyns which brings together stories, sounds and words that you have recorded yourself – each week guided by a keyword. We have commissioned work by established and emerging writers, sound artists and poets. Over the series you'll hear voice memos and calls, music, essays and fiction. For the first episode, seeing as it's on all our minds, we set Distance as the keyword. We received so many submissions for this word and we have included a range of interpretations in the programme. Sarah Keating is a radio producer and journalist based in Singapore. She sent us a short recording from her balcony in Singapore, where she now lives. As thunder rumbles in the background and she talks about the present moment and on the importance of listening to the world around us. Sarah Davis-Goff is one of the founders of Tramp Press and in her debut novel Last Ones Left Alive Ireland is a post virus landscape filled with walking Zombie-like corpses. Her new piece for Keywords Between Us captures other dystopias and fears. Sarah recorded her piece herself on her phone and sent it on to us. We are now so used to hearing voices on messages, online videos with slightly distorted DIY recordings, that I think this adds to the pieces to hear slight variations in the audio. I have taken the recordings and weaved sound and music around certain pieces to bring them together for listeners. Nick McGinley's essay looks at different kinds of distances in his piece called Hikikomori. It's a Japanese word meaning confinement and ‘social withdrawal' and this is something, as Nick explores in his piece, that can be imposed by the State or it can come from within ourselves. Aodán McCardle is a performer, writer and artist and he's the author of two books, Shuddered and ISing (from VEER). For Keywords Aodán has written a prose poem, a stream of consciousness beginning with, he says, ‘the dilemma of the unsaid, its return and being revisited in language and then becoming a specific memory'. Marcella O'Sullivan is a songwriter and a writer living in Melbourne. She's also a mother and in a lyrical piece written for Keywords she describes a hot summer night as her son lies beside her. She notes the changes as he grows and develops. Writer Sinéad Gleeson and music producer Stephen Shannon have collaborated on an audio essay for this first episode of Keywords. It's fair to say that the quality of this recording is very high as Stephen Shannon is a very well respected music producer. Together their collaboration yearns for the sounds and sights of the forest, the sea and imagines the loneliness of Fastnet Rock and Lighthouse its ‘own stone of self-isolation'. Sinéad's collection of essays is called Constellations and Stephen Shannon creates under the name of Mount Alaska (with Cillian McDonnell). K Quintet are husband and wife duo David Duffy (Composer/Double Bassist) and Ksenia Parkhatskaya (Dancer and singer) have composed a song called ‘Standing in the Distance'. They tell us it's a simple love song in many ways, but also inspired by the current crisis ‘while we all wait apart from each other, and ‘call through the distance, how are you?' K Quintet's first album “something else” is a straight ahead jazz record harking back to the 50's and 60's, while they are currently recording their second album ‘Colours' which will be released in late 2020. Keywords is presented and produced by Zoë Comyns and is a New Normal Culture production for RTÉ Radio 1 Extra. Assistant Producer: Regan Hutchins The series is funded by the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland Sound and Vision 3 Scheme and by RTÉ
To support our work and listen to additional content, see here: https://patreon.com/yourshelf and follow us on social media @_yourshelf_. In our latest, fourth episode of The YourShelf Podcast, Flights of Thought, our chief curator Juliano Zaffino (Jay) sits down with author Sara Baume to discuss books, birds, and Sara's nonfiction debut handiwork. For full show notes, see here: https://podcast.yourshelf.uk/episodes/4. Thanks for listening. LinksPatreonInstagramTwitterPodcastYourShelfEpisode NotesJay asks Sara about her bookshelves, the books that made her, and what she's excited to read in the near future. (from 2:12)Sara begins the discussion with some insights from the writing of her nonfiction debut, handiwork. Sara and Jay discuss all three of Sara's published books, the importance of birds, solitude and other recurrent themes throughout her work. (from 13:30)Finally, Sara talks about her new novella, slated for a 2021 publication, and talks about launching a book during a national lockdown. Sara also shares some quarantine reading recommendations. (from 54:02)Jay recommends signing up to our Patreon for access to exclusive content, including a 10min bonus episode with more content from the interview, where Jay and Sara Baume play a game of "Celebs Read Nice Tweets", and Sara answers some "phone-in questions".Jay wraps up with all the books that were discussed in the episode and a few other books he recommends. Some of the books and authors we discussed in our latest episode include Arundhati Roy's The God of Small Things, Alice Lyons' Oona, Celia Paul's Self Portrait, Iris Murdoch's The Sea, The Sea, Raynor Winn's The Salt Path, Max Porter's Grief Is The Thing With Feathers, Han Kang's The White Book, Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, Rob Doyle's Threshold, Evie Wyld's The Bass Rock, Adrian Duncan's A Sabbatical in Leipzig, Olivia Laing's forthcoming Funny Weather, Jenny Offill's Weather, and Colum McCann's Apeirogon. If you're looking for even more recommendations, especially in the age of social distancing, Jay has you covered. While most of the books he's read recently have been Sara Baume's three fantastic books, he also recommends the poetry of Doireann Ní Ghríofa, whose forthcoming prose debut A Ghost In The Throat is discussed by Sara earlier in this episode. Currently, he's reading Hex by Rebecca Dinerstein Knight, The M Pages by Colette Bryce, After Fame by Sam Riviere, and Rest and Be Thankful by Emma Glass; while he hasn't yet finished these books, each one is already totally compelling and recommendable.Also, Jay reminds that you can order a copy of his book of poems, the debut publication of The YourShelf Press, on yourshelf.uk/press.Sara Baume closes with a reading from her non-fiction debut handiwork (from 1:02:48).Buy, read and review handiwork online now, available from most bookstores! Sara's previous books Spill Simmer Falter Wither and A Line Made By Walking are also both available for purchase.Thanks for listening and tune in again soon for Episode Five!
The 2010s will go down as an extremely significant decade in Irish literature in both of our official languages. The bailout and its aftermath affected the country heterogeneously and the literary scream in response to this uneven scourging was delivered in uneven voices: younger, more rural, less aspirational, more accented. While the Celtic Tiger wrote about the recent past with the smugness of a returned backpacker dropping off a year’s worth of laundry, these new voices had a distinctly different sense of the past, the present and the future… and everything in between. It was in this environment that Lisa Coen and her business partner Sarah Davis-Goff set up Tramp Press, an independent publisher which has released two Books of the Year in the past three years, as well as clocking up a dizzying array of other prizes. In today’s episode, Lisa talks to Darach about the circumstances that gave birth to this publishing phenomenon and the mission that drives them forward. She explains the significance of the company’s name and of tramps in Irish literature. She schools Darach’s big jackeen head on the secrets of Shoe Corner and the nearest ATM and tells of the urgent relevance of the outsider’s stories. And yes, they talk about Irish too! You can find out more about Tramp Press at https://www.tramppress.com --- Get Kirsten Shiel art prints here: https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/kirstenshiel/ Support for this episode comes from Foras na Gaeilge - https://www.forasnagaeilge.ie/ --- Contact the show: twitter - @motherfocloir and @theirishfor email - motherfocloir@headstuff.org
This week on the TPOE podcast is a live recording, from O'Mahony's of Watergrasshill during the Mystery Bus Tour of Crosstown Drift litfest, where I got to interview Emilie Pine (Notes to Self) and Ian Maleney (Minor Monuments) about writing their non-fiction books; Tramp Press, which published both of them; and what's next for both of them.
Welcome to the Books That Made Me Podcast! In the inaugural episode, we chat to Lisa Coen & Sarah Davis Goff from Tramp Press about the most important and loved books in their lives. Highlights include a shared love of Nigel Slater, Anne Enright, the importance of horror in adolescence and the brilliance of Irish theatre. Books mentioned in this episode are:Spot/Bran books - Eric HillStone soup - folklore, unknown Peter Rabbit series - Beatrix PotterMalory Towers - Enid BlytonThe Secret Seven - Enid Blyton Assorted works - Edgar Allen Poe It - Stephen King Sula - Toni Morrison Persuasion - Jane Austen Pet Sematary - Stephen KingMaking Babies - Anne Enright The Green Road - Anne EnrightThe Lives of Eliza Lynch - Anne Enright Firestarter - Stephen King War & Peace - Leo Tolstoy One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich - Aleksandr SolzhenitsynMrs Dalloway - Virginia Woolf The Outsider - Stephen King Philadelphia, Here I Come - Brian Friel A Whistle In The Dark - Tom MurphyThe Gigli Concert - Tom Murphy The Ancillary Trilogy - Ann LeckieSolar Bones - Mike McCormack Minor Monuments - Ian MaleneyThe Stand - Stephen King Running Like A Girl - Alexandra HeminsleyIn White Ink - Elskie RahillAn Unravelling - Elskie Rahill The Firestarters - Jan CarsonShow Them A Good Time - Nicole Flattery
Ian Maleney released his debut collection of essays, Minor Monuments, on Tramp Press at the end of March. He writes intimately about the family homestead in the midlands, his role in it, and how Alzheimer's took hold as his grandfather suffered from the disease. We talk about how the collection developed, how Tramp got involved and life in 2019 Ireland
April's Irish Times Books Podcast features interviews with Sinéad Gleeson about her acclaimed collection of personal essays, Constellations, and Sarah Davis-Goff, co-founder of Tramp Press, about her own first novel, Last Ones Left Alive, a dystopian novel set in the west of Ireland in the near future.
Sarah Davis-Goff is an author and co-founder of Independent publisher Tramp Press (
First published by Irish independent Tramp Press, Emilie Pine’s Notes to Self became a phenomenal word-of-mouth bestseller. Now picked up on this side of the water by Hamish Hamilton, Pine’s debut collection of autobiographical essays is a poignant, radically honest and fiercely intelligent account of the pains and joys of living as a woman in the 21st Century. She was in conversation with Katherine Angel, author of Unmastered: A Book on Desire, Most Difficult to Tell. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Irish author Emilie Pine chats to Kathy about her collection of highly personal essays, Notes to Self, published by Tramp Press. The book deals with the taboo topics we're not supposed to talk about including alcoholism, infertility and rape. Emilie tells Kathy about the background to some of the essays, what she has learned from writing them and why her mantra for 2019 is: being strategic, but also reflecting.
Brea and Mallory talk about out of print books and solve your bookish moving problems. Use the hashtag #ReadingGlassesPodcast to participate in online discussion! Email us at readingglassespodcast at gmail dot com! Reading Glasses Merch Links - Reading Glasses Transcriptions on Gretta Reading Glasses Facebook Group Reading Glasses Goodreads Group Amazon Wish List Tramp Press Books Mentioned - Chilling Adventures of Sabrina by Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and Robert Hack The Night Wanderer by Drew Hayden Taylor The Last Days of Video by Jeremy Hawkins Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut The Uninvited by Dorothy Macardle
Emilie Pine, author of the best-selling essay collection Notes To Self, joined Alan and Sarah in the All Curious Minds tent at the All Together Now festival in Co. Waterford to talk about a book that was very important to her when she was young, Louisa May Alcott's Little Women. We talked about boxes of books, rebel girls, gothic novels, not having a tv, and all about Jo. Thank you so much to Linda and Erin of All Curious Minds for having us and to Lisa and Sarah of Tramp Press for their help. We didn't have mics on the audience so you can't hear them too well so you'll have to take our word for it that they enjoyed it. You can find Emilie on Twitter @emiliepine. Notes To Self is getting rave reviews from absolutely everybody and you should read it immediately. Alan is @alan_maguire and Sarah is @griffski. Sarah's first novel Spare And Found Parts is both available now and excellent. Her second novel Other Words For Smoke is out next year. Juvenalia is on all of the social medias, if you search for Juvenalia, you'll find us. We're doing a live show as part of the Dublin Podcast Festival with The Sunday Sermon on September 30th in the Soundhouse. Juvenalia original artwork by Dee McDonnell This episode was produced and edited by Brian + Alan
Inside Books is a fortnightly programme presented by Breda Brown. This episode features Sarah Davis Goff and Lisa Cohen from Tramp Press
Lisa Coen is one half of Tramp Press. We’re big fans of Tramp Press here at Juvenalia so we were delighted when Lisa took a break from the world of high literature to talk to us about her love of Stephen King. As you might imagine, it took us a while to get through it all. Lisa knows so, so much about Stephen King, it was a joy to listen to her for nearly two hours. Sarah went into the episode not caring about Stephen King and came out a convert, clutching a copy of IT. You probably will too. We’ll leave you to it. If you like Juvenalia, maybe subscribe to us on your podcast app of choice and maybe, maybe, maybe leave a nice review? Thanks anyway if you don’t. Follow Juvenalia on Twitter Juvenalia original artwork by Dee McDonnell This episode was produced by Alan Maguire
In our latest podcast, Joanna Walsh discusses the Irish Writing Boom with Sarah Davis-Goff of Tramp Press; Susan Tomaselli, editor of Gorse Journal; and Amy Herron of the Irish Writers' Centre. They touch on the culture and history of Ireland’s literary journals; short story culture; the fight against marketing departments and the work of fostering literary innovation.
Welcome to episode 2 of Bookish, and our special guest this month is Lisa Coen of Tramp Press, who picks works by JM Synge, Shirley Jackson and Stephen King for the “Trilogy” slot. In books news, we talk about ebooks and independent bookshops in light of a recent report from the New York Times which […] La entrada Bookish – Episode 2 se publicó primero en Headstuff.