Belfast Launch of Female Lines, Crescent Arts Centre
Crescent Arts Centre 2-4 University Road, BELFAST, United KingdomIn 1985, The Female Line: Northern Irish Women Writers was published, edited by Ruth Carr. A pioneering anthology at the time, it gave many Northern Irish women writers their first opportunity for publication. Now, over thirty years later, Female Lines: New Writing by Women from Northern Ireland – a stunning mosaic of work by some of the best contemporary women writers from Northern Ireland – acts as both a new staging post and a sequel to its vibrant feminist predecessor. Trans-genre in contents and including both experienced and newer women writers, this landmark anthology features women writers playing with different modes, forms, and innovations – from magical realism and surrealism to humour and multi-perspective narratives – and celebrates fiction, poetry, drama, essays, life writing, and photography. It considers how much has changed or stayed the same in terms of scope and opportunity for women writers and for women more generally in Northern Irish society (and its diaspora) in the post-Good Friday Agreement era. Northern Irish women’s writing is going from strength to strength and this anthology captures its current richness and audacity. Edited by Linda Anderson and Dawn Sherratt-Bado and featuring work by: Linda Anderson, Jean Bleakney, Maureen Boyle, Colette Bryce, […]
In conversation with Carlo Gébler at Dublin Book Festival
Smock Alley Theatre 6/7 Exchange Street Lower, Temple Bar, Dublin 8, IrelandAuthor Carlo Gébler hosts an event which will explore the crucial narrative element of developing a sense of place during the writing process. He will be joined by Billy O’Callaghan, author of short stories and his first novel The Dead House (The O’Brien Press), comic strip writer Arja Kajermo – who is debuting her novel The Iron Age (Tramp Press), Bernie McGill, author of The Watch House (Headline) and Ciaran McMenamin, a stage and screen actor who is introducing his first novel Skintown (Doubleday Ireland). Together the authors will discuss and share their keen insights on effectively establishing a strong theme of place throughout their work, and how doing so enriched their storytelling. Free event. Booking advised. Book here. IN ASSOCIATION WITH BELFAST BOOK FESTIVAL
Dublin Launch of Female Lines, Irish Writers’ Centre
Irish Writers' Centre 19 Parnell Square, DUBLIN, IrelandIn 1985, The Female Line: Northern Irish Women Writers was published, edited by Ruth Carr. A pioneering anthology at the time, it gave many Northern Irish women writers their first opportunity for publication. Now, over thirty years later, Female Lines: New Writing by Women from Northern Ireland – a stunning mosaic of work by some of the best contemporary women writers from Northern Ireland – acts as both a new staging post and a sequel to its vibrant feminist predecessor. Trans-genre in contents and including both experienced and newer women writers, this landmark anthology features women writers playing with different modes, forms, and innovations – from magical realism and surrealism to humour and multi-perspective narratives – and celebrates fiction, poetry, drama, essays, life writing, and photography. It considers how much has changed or stayed the same in terms of scope and opportunity for women writers and for women more generally in Northern Irish society (and its diaspora) in the post-Good Friday Agreement era. Northern Irish women’s writing is going from strength to strength and this anthology captures its current richness and audacity. Edited by Linda Anderson and Dawn Sherratt-Bado and featuring work by: Linda Anderson, Jean Bleakney, Maureen Boyle, Colette Bryce, […]
One Day Fiction Writing Workshop with Bernie McGill
Flowerfield Arts Centre 185 Coleraine Road, PORTSTEWART, Northern Ireland, United KingdomTopics covered include: Building Characters; Creating a sense of place; Selecting point of view. Suitable for both beginners and experienced fiction writers, short story writers and novelists. Participants will be invited to take part in writing exercises in order to develop their work and practice. You're welcome to bring a packed lunch and we have a tea/coffee machine and some snacks available at reception.
Begin Your Novel with Bernie McGill
Verbal Arts Centre Stable Lane and Mall Wall, Bishop Street Within, LONDONDERRY, United KingdomStarts: Tues 27 Feb 2018 Time: 7.00pm – 9.00pm Duration: 8 Weeks Cost: €88*/£80 Location: Verbal Arts Centre, Derry *Please note this cost is based on the currency exchange rate of £80. In this 8-week course, we will look at: structuring work; writing openings with impact; developing setting; creating credible characters; selecting point of view; writing dialogue; editing and redrafting; outlets for completed work. You will be invited to take part in writing exercises to further develop your work and to share your writing with other class members. Suitable for committed writers. Participants should come with a 250 word outline for a novel. Works-in-progress are welcomed. Bernie McGill is the author of two novels, The Watch House and The Butterfly Cabinet, both published by Tinder Press, and of a short story collection, Sleepwalkers, published by Whittrick Press. To book, please contact The Irish Writers' Centre (organiser) by phone on (+353) 1 872 1302; by email at info@writerscentre.ie or book online here: https://irishwriterscentre.ie/products/northern-ireland-begin-your-novel-with-bernie-mcgill
A Sense of Place with Bernie McGill, Claire Savage and Margot McCuaig
Waterstones, Coleraine 10 Church Street, Coleraine, United KingdomJoin Bernie McGill, Claire Savage and Margot McCuaig as they explore the ways in which landscape - particularly the North Antrim coast, Rathlin Island and its surrounding areas - presents a power and an influence in creative writing. Margot McCuaig is a storyteller and published novelist. She writes, produces and directs award-winning documentary feature films. She also makes live television programmes as a producer and executive producer. She’s a mother and grandmother, sitting at the centre of an amazing family, and she lives in Glasgow, Scotland and Rathlin Island, Ireland; a beautiful city and an inspirational island. Claire Savage published her debut children’s novel, Magical Masquerade, in April 2017, officially launching it at the Belfast Book Festival in June. Chosen as one of Lagan Online’s 12NOW (New Original Writers) for 2016/17, Claire also writes short stories and poetry, with various work published in literary journals. Claire has just received a grant from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland’s National Lottery funding as part of its Support for Individual Artists Programme (under the General Arts Award Scheme). This will support her in her artistic production and promotion, drafting a second novel, and creating a support structure for the first. Bernie McGill’s first novel, The Butterfly Cabinet, […]
Literary Ladies at Primrose on the Quay
Primrose on the Quay 2 Atlantic Quay, Strand Road, Londonderry, United KingdomThis event will be hosted by the Literary Ladies on behalf of Women Aloud NI. On International Women's Day, some twenty local women writers will gather to share and celebrate their work. Come along and join us for what promises to be a marvellous evening! Readers include: Jane Talbot; Freya McClements ; Lynne Edgar; Julieann Campbell; Felicity McCall; Claire Allan; Bernie McGill; Mel Bradley; Maura Johnston; Helen Clarke; Anita Robinson; Marilyn McLaughlin; Madeline McCully; Ellen Factor; Berni Kerr. #IWD2018 #ReadWomen #WomenAloudNI18 @WomenAloudNI @derrywriters
One City One Book: An Evening with Bernie McGill and Anne Devlin
Finaghy Road Library 38B Finaghy Road, Belfast, United KingdomAs part of the One City One Book Programme 2018, authors Bernie McGill and Anne Devlin will discuss their stories from The Long Gaze Back. Chaired by author Jan Carson. Anne Devlin was born in Belfast. David Marcus first published her stories in the Irish Press in the 1980’s. Her collection The Waypaver was published by Faber in 1986. She is best known as a dramatist, both for Ourselves Alone (Royal Court, 1985) and After Easter (Royal Shakespeare Company, 1993). She has worked extensively in TV and film. Her most recent work was the radio play The Forgotten(2009). Bernie McGill is the author of Sleepwalkers, a collection of stories short-listed in 2014 for the Edge Hill Short Story Prize, and of the novels The Watch House and The Butterfly Cabinet. Her work has been placed in the Seán Ó Faoláin, the Bridport, and the Michael McLaverty Short Story Prizes and she won the Zoetrope: All-Story Award in the US. Her short fiction has appeared in The Long Gaze Back, The Glass Shore and Female Lines, all by New Island Books. She is the recipient of a number of Arts Council of Northern Ireland Awards and was granted a research bursary in 2013 from the Society of Authors. She lives in Portstewart in Northern Ireland […]
One City One Book: A Feast of Female Voices
Blanchardstown Library Blanchardstown Shopping Centre, Dublin, IrelandThe Long Gaze Back authors Bernie McGill, Lia Mills and Éilis Ní Dhuibhne talk with editor Sinéad Gleeson about the anthology, their work and being a female author in Ireland today. Bernie McGill is the author of Sleepwalkers, a collection of stories short-listed in 2014 for the Edge Hill Short Story Prize, and of the novels The Watch House and The Butterfly Cabinet. Her work has been placed in the Seán Ó Faoláin, the Bridport, and the Michael McLaverty Short Story Prizes and she won the Zoetrope: All-Story Award in the US. Her short fiction has appeared in The Long Gaze Back, The Glass Shore and Female Lines, all by New Island Books. She is the recipient of a number of Arts Council of Northern Ireland Awards and was granted a research bursary in 2013 from the Society of Authors. She lives in Portstewart in Northern Ireland with her family. Lia Mills writes novels, short stories, essays and an occasional blog. A memoir, In Your Face, describes her experience of mouth cancer treatment in 2006. Her third novel, Fallen, was the Dublin/Belfast Two Cities One Book selection in 2016, in which year she was also the Arts Council Writer Fellow in UCD and writer-in-residence at Farmleigh House. Éilis Ní […]
A Fiction Reading with Bernie McGill and Beatrice Colin
The Vic Bar at the Tron Theatre 63 Trongate, Glasgow, United KingdomCrossways: The Irish Scottish Cultural & Literary Festival 9th ~ 15th April 2018 ~ Merchant City, Glasgow Bernie McGill and Beatrice Colin will read from their work at this Crossways Festival event at the Vic Bar in the Tron Theatre, Glasgow. Beatrice Colin is the author of the novel To Capture What We Cannot Keep, published in the US in 2016 by Flatiron Books as well as in the UK, Australia, Germany, Italy, Brazil, Poland and the Czech Republic in 2017. She also wrote The Luminous Life of Lilly Aphrodite (published as The Glimmer Palace in the US) and The Songwriter. She has been shortlisted for a British Book Award, a Saltire Award and a Scottish Arts Council Book of the Year Award and writes short stories, screen and radio plays and for children. One of her children's novels, My Invisible Sister (with Sara Pinto) has been made into a film for TV by Disney in the US. Her novel for children, Pyrate's Boy is written under the name E.B. Colin and published by Floris Books. Beatrice is a Lecturer in Creative Writing at Strathclyde University in Glasgow. Bernie McGill is the author of the novels The Watch House and The Butterfly Cabinet and the […]