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The Big House in the North of Ireland
"The Big House in the North of Ireland" explores the changing fortunes of the landed elite in the six counties that became Northern Ireland from the land war of the late 1870s to the last days of the Unionist government at Stormont in the 1960s.

Price: US$30.40

Love Poet, Carpenter
More than 50 artists, mostly poets and prose writers, contribute to a festschrift, celebrating his life and work.

Price: US$22.80

Love Poet, Carpenter Limited Edition

More than 50 artists, mostly poets and prose writers, contribute to a festschrift, celebrating his life and work. Signed by 39 Including Seamus Heaney; Paul Durcan and Gerald Dawe.

Limited to 195 copies



Price: US$342.00

Good Friday: The Death of Irish Republicanism

A contemporaneous commentary on the Irish Peace Process from an Irish Republican perspective, Good Friday is a compilation of articles written by one of the most prominent Republican voices in Ireland, Anthony McIntrye. The journalist, activist and former political prisoner raises serious and compelling questions about post 'Good Friday Agreement' Republican strategies in Northern Ireland.



Price: US$27.34

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Features

Michael Longley

Pictured below (Thursday 25 June 2009) in the McMordie Hall, Queen's University Belfast, for the publication of: Love Poet, Carpenter: a festschrift of poems and prose for in celebration of his 70th birthday. Love Poet, Carpenter has been edited by Robin Robertson.

Michael Longley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



Poet Michael Longley was born in Belfast in 1939 and educated at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution. After reading classics at Trinity College, Dublin, he taught in schools in Belfast, Dublin and London. He joined the Arts Council of Northern Ireland in 1970, working in literature and the traditional arts as Combined Arts Director before taking early retirement from the post in 1991. He was awarded the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry in 2001.

His first collection of poetry, No Continuing City: Poems 1963-1968, was published in 1969, and the collection Poems 1963-1983 was published in 1985. There was a 12-year gap between the publication of The Echo Gate: Poems 1975-1979 (1979) and the acclaimed Gorse Fires (1991), winner of the Whitbread Poetry Award. The Weather in Japan (2000), won the Hawthornden Prize, the T. S. Eliot Prize and the Belfast Arts Award for Literature. He is editor of 20th Century Irish Poems (2002).

Michael Longley was Writer Fellow at Trinity College, Dublin, in 1993. He has written widely on the arts in Northern Ireland, contributing to magazines including Encounter and Phoenix and has written scripts for BBC radio. He is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a member of Aosdána, an affiliation of Irish artists engaged in literature, music and visual arts. He lives in Belfast with his wife, the critic Edna Longley.


His Collected Poems was published in 2006.

Reviews:

Daily Telegraph, 25 October 2006
'Longley's poetry is always true to itself... this book is important'

The Times
"a master in an old, great tradition"

Buy the Limited Edition (Signed and limited to 200 copies) now for £125.00