Starting in May, Galway Arts Centre is offering aspiring poets a choice of three poetry workshops, all facilitated by poet Kevin Higgins, whose best-selling first collection, The Boy With No Face, published by Salmon Poetry, was short-listed for the 2006 Strong Award for Best First Collection by an Irish poet. Kevin’s second collection of poems, Time Gentlemen, Please, was published in 2008 by Salmon Poetry and his poetry is discussed in The Cambridge Introduction to Modern Irish Poetry. His third collection Frightening New Furniture was published in 2010 by Salmon and his work also appears in the generation defining anthology Identity Parade –New British and Irish Poets (Ed. Roddy Lumsden, Bloodaxe, 2010). A collection of Kevin’s essays and book reviews, Mentioning The War, has just been published by Salmon Poetry. His next collection of poetry, The Ghost in The Lobby, will be published in early 2013, also by Salmon.
Kevin is an experienced workshop facilitator and several of his students have gone on to achieve publication success. One of his workshop participants at Galway Arts Centre won the prestigious Hennessy Award for New Irish Poetry, two have won the Cúirt New Writing Prize, one has been awarded an Arts Council Bursary and yet another won the Cúirt Poetry Grand Slam, while several have published collections of their poems. Kevin is also co-organiser of the successful Over The Edge reading series which specialises in promoting new writers.
Each workshop will run for eight weeks, commencing the week of May 8th. They will take place on Thursday afternoons, 2-4pm (first class May 10th); on Friday afternoons, 2-3.30pm (first class May 11th) and on Saturday afternoons, 2-3.30pm (first class May 12th).
The Friday and Saturday afternoon workshops are open to both complete beginners as well as those who’ve been writing for some time. The Thursday afternoon workshop is an Advanced Poetry Workshop, suitable for those who’ve participated in poetry workshops before or had poems published in magazines. The cost to participants is €90, with a concession rate.
Places must be paid for in advance. To reserve a place contact reception at Galway Arts Centre, 47 Dominick Street, phone 091 565886 or email info@galwayartscentre.ie
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
DAYTIME CREATIVE WRITING AT GALWAY ARTS CENTRE WITH SUSAN MILLAR DUMARS
In May, Galway Arts Centre presents a daytime class for all those beginner and continuing creative writing students out there, both facilitated by Susan Millar DuMars. Susan Millar DuMars writes both poetry and fiction. A collection of her stories, Lights In The Distance, was published in December 2010 by Doire Press; she has published two collection of poetry, Big Pink Umbrella (2008) and Dreams For Breakfast both with Salmon Poetry. Her next collection of poetry, The God Thing, will be published by Salmon Poetry in early 2013. She is also co-organiser of the Over The Edge reading series which specifically promotes new writers.
The class is suitable for both beginning and continuing creative writing students, working in either poetry or fiction. Students will spend their week responding to writing exercises designed to inspire, rather than inhibit. In class, they will receive gentle feedback on their work from their classmates and from the teacher.
The class takes place on Monday afternoons, 2-3.30pm,commencing on Monday, May 14th.The cost to participants is 90 Euro with a concession price. Booking is essential as places are limited. For booking please contact Galway Arts Centre, 47 Dominick Street, phone 091 565886 or email info@galwayartscentre.ie
Monday, March 26, 2012
The Cúirt Festival of International Literature BRUNCH

The Cúirt Festival presents Jim Mullarkey, Susan Lindsay, John Walsh,
Susan Millar DuMars & Gerry Galvin
SUNDAY 29TH APRIL, 12PM at Vina Mara
Inishbofin Jaunt - Writing Holidays With Yvonne Cullen
Inishbofin Jaunt
Writing Holidays With Yvonne Cullen
Dubliner Magazine’s “Best Creative Writing Teacher in Dublin”
May Bank Holiday Writing Weekend
Inishbofin Island, Connemara
Coinciding with Inishbofin Arts Festival & offering a bonus two-day writing retreat. Tuition Fee: €270*
*€250 to readers of the Over The Edge blog!
Tuition, writing time, good time with kindred spirits and the chance to make the most of a beautiful place!
“Wonderful Weekend!” “Exciting how much progress I have made in one weekend!” Participant feedback, 2011.
MAY BANK HOLIDAY COURSES ON INISHBOFIN
Course Tuition fee of €270 covers four classes and/or workshops plus one informal ‘discussion class,’ a one-to-one meeting, a group reading, support during Writing Retreat days, optional organised social time, reading materials and a document of the ‘best of’ Yvonne’s tips and techniques developed over twenty years of teaching creative writing! Comfortable and good value single room self-catering accommodation is organised for you (paid for separately: from €25 per night based on a 5-night stay; from €30 for 4 nights). Detailed handout on island, advice on walks etc. is available pre-trip. Max 9 students per course. Bookings plus tuition and full accommodation fees required by 25 April to avoid disappointment.
With the BEGINNERS' course here outlined I've aimed to give the kind of trip that worked best for me when I was getting started. Equally, I've tried with the DEVELOPING writer course to offer something that would have felt just right to me when I was pushing a first big writing project up the hill!
Two days of classes and an optional two-day writing retreat is the plan, whether you go for the BEGINNERS' or DEVELOPING option. And with max. Student numbers of 9 in each course, there will be good time for everyone’s work and favourite writing bugbears to be spot-lit!
Please do note particularly that I'm really encouraging you to come to Inishbofin on THURSDAY night, 3rd May, in order to have a two day writing, walking, thinking, brainstorming, meditating (or even arts-festival-attending) stint before or after your course. It is a long way to Bofin, and it is a really cathartic and head-clearing experience being there. Please give this option serious thought.
I will be able to facilitate a couple of participants who need a shorter trip, but if you are self-catering, the standard accommodation charge of €125.00 will have to apply (applies to shared house we are currently booking, and is subject to slight change in further new houses booked). For those opting for B and B (one room left as I write!), I can work with stays of 3 nights and upwards on this weekend, which is such a prime, and prized one for the island's accommodation hosts. Hope you can understand this! Looking forward to hearing from some of you!
Book on 086 1701418 / writingtrain@gmail.com
“I couldn’t have had a more inspiring, generous or devoted teacher” - Helena Nolan, Kavanagh Poetry Prize-winner, 2011.
2012 Cúirt Over The Edge Showcase reading with Erin Buttner, Kevin O'Shea, Maeve Mulrennan, Eamonn Kelly & Sarah Maria Griffin
2012 Cúirt Over The Edge Showcase Reading
Friday, April 27th, 3:00pm
Town Hall Theatre
All welcome
There is no cover charge
The 2012 Cúirt Over The Edge showcase reading takes place as part of this year's Cúirt International Festival of Literature at the Town Hall Theatre, Galway on Friday, April 27th, 3:00pm. The writers showcased this year are Erin Buttner, Maeve Mulrennan & Sarah Griffin. The reading will be introduced by regular Over The Edge host, Susan Millar DuMars.
This event has grown since its inception in 2006 to become one of Ireland's premier platforms for showcasing new poets and fiction writers. Participating writers have previously been Featured Readers at Ireland's most successful reading series, the Over The Edge: Open Readings in Galway City Library. This year the winners of the Cúirt New Writing Prize 2012, Kevin O'Shea and Eamonn Kelly, will read with the Over The Edge writers. The Cúirt New Writing Prize is kindly sponsored by Tigh Neactain in memory of Lena Maguire. http://www.cuirt.ie/Newsflash/cuirt-new-writing-prize-2012.html
Erin Buttner is a writer, baker, broadcaster, and veteran living in Kinvara, Co Galway. A native New Yorker, Erin immigrated to Ireland in 2008 to take a Master’s in Writing at NUI Galway. Her poetry has been published in Chronogram Arts Magazine in New York, Three Times Daily and Ropes. She is presently drafting her memoir based on the four years she spent serving in the US Military. Erin was a Featured Reader at the November 2011 Over The Edge Open Reading. http://www.overtheedgeliteraryevents.blogspot.com/2011/10/erin-buttner-stephen-byrne-donna-potts.html
Erin Buttner
Maeve Mulrennan grew up in County Kildare. She studied Arts Administration and Policy at NUI Galway is currently Visual Arts Officer at Galway Arts Centre. An experienced visual artist, Maeve recently began writing fiction. Last year, she attended Celeste Augé’s short fiction class at Galway Arts Centre earlier this year and October 2011 took part in the annual Over The Edge Fiction Slam. Maeve was a Featured Reader at the December 2011 Over The Edge Open Reading which was her first major public reading. http://www.overtheedgeliteraryevents.blogspot.com/2011/11/tamar-yoseloff-christopher-meehan-maeve.html
Maeve Mulrennan
Sarah Maria Griffin is 24 years old and is currently living in Dublin after completing the MA in Writing NUIG. Her first collection of poetry, Follies, was published by Lapwing in April last year. During 2011 she was sent to New York was part of Culture Ireland’s ‘Imagine Ireland’ initiative, to represent contemporary Irish performance poetry as part of the Glór Sessions. Her work has appeared in many literary journals both in Ireland and abroad. She has also contributed interviews and poetry to RTE Radio 1’s Arena. She has performed at major spoken word events all over the country. She is currently Writer-in- Residence at Collinstown Community College, Clondalkin. Sarah was a Featured Reader at the January 2011 Over The Edge: Open Reading.
http://www.overtheedgeliteraryevents.blogspot.com/2010/12/over-edge-celebrates-its-eighth.html
Sarah Maria Griffin
Eamonn Kelly is a native of Dublin, and based in Galway since the 1980s. He has written for television and radio, scripting in RTE on the sitcom, Upwardly Mobile, and providing contributions to Lyric FM’s ‘Quiet Quarter’. Eamonn is an arts graduate of NUI Galway and has contributed articles on arts and culture to the Irish Times, and written about theatre and film for Books Ireland. Eamonn is the winner of the fiction section in this year's Cúirt New Writing Prize.
Eamonn Kelly
http://www.cuirt.ie/event/87-cuirt-over-the-edge-showcase.html
Kevin O’Shea lives on the edge of Connemara, in Moycullen, still within earshot of the old Galway-Clifden railway. Having retreated from the world of technology to timidly confront the world of imagination he was short listed for Over The Edge New Writer of the Year in both 2009 and 2010. He has been published in Irish Left Review, Ropes, Pen Tales and poetry anthologies Behind the Masks and Mosaic. For 2012 he has been accepted for publication in THE SHOp and Northern Liberties Review while his debut collection The Art of Non-Fishing is scheduled for publication by Doire Press. Kevin was a Featured Reader at the August 2009 Over The Edge: Open Reading. He is the winner of the poetry section in this year's Cúirt New Writing Prize.
Kevin O'Shea
Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing support of Galway City Library, Galway City Council, The Arts Council and The Cúírt Festival of International Literature.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Friday, March 23, 2012
North Beach Poetry Nights with Kevin O'Shea & Adam White NOTE NEW TIME
North Beach Poetry Nights with Kevin O'Shea and Adam White.
Monday 23rd April in The Crane Bar, Sea Road, Galway
at the very NEW TIME 6.30 pm
Kevin O’Shea lives on the edge of Connemara, in Moycullen, still within earshot of the old Galway-Clifden Railway. Having retreated from the world of technology to timidly confront the world of imagination, he was short listed for Over The Edge New Writer of the Year in both 2009 and 2010. He has been published in Irish Left Review, Ropes, Pen Tales and poetry anthologies Behind the Masks and Mosaic. For 2012 he has been accepted for publication in THE SHOp and Northern Liberties Review. He is the winner of the Cuirt New Writing Prize 2012 for poetry. His debut collection The Art of Non-Fishing will be published by Doire press in October this year.
Adam White is from Youghal in East Cork. After putting all his carpentry tools away in a safe place some years ago, he began reading and writing poetry in earnest. He has often performed his poems at the North Beach Nights in Galway's Crane Bar, but also at the Electric Picnic and in France, where he is teaching English at present and working on a first collection of poems. His poems are inspired by his travels in and out of Ireland, by the value of work and the love of doing a beautiful task well, such as restoring furniture or indeed writing a poem about restoring furniture. He is interested in the oral tradition of poetry itself, in the idea that its oral quality and accessibility can add to, rather than take from, the depth of a poem.
Poets wishing to enter the Slam on the night need 2 max. three minutes poems.
The prize for the winner is a bottle of wine and entry to the North Beach Grand Slam in December.
Door: 5/3 Euro
Info: john @091/593290
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Friday, March 09, 2012
Paul Maddern, Rejini Samuel & Stephanie Klapp for March Over The Edge: Open Reading
Paul Maddern
The March ‘Over The Edge: Open Reading’ takes place in Galway City Library on Thursday, March 29th, 6.30-8.00pm. The Featured Readers are Stephanie Klapp, Rejini Samuel & Paul Maddern.
Paul Maddern was born in Bermuda and lives in Co. Down. A winner in the 2009 Templar Poetry Pamphlet Competition, with Kelpdings, his ensuing collection, The Beachcomber’s Report (Templar, 2010) was shortlisted for the 2011 Eithne Strong Award. For his PhD at Queen’s University Belfast, he created the Seamus Heaney Centre Digital Archive, an online resource housing recordings of writers reading their work in public. Paul is currently Teaching Fellow in Creative Writing at the University of Leeds.
Rejini Samuel was born and brought up in Nigeria where her Indian parents were secondary school teachers. She came to study in Galway in 1984. She is an Irish citizen and now considers herself almost Irish as well as almost Indian. Rejini was short-listed for the 2011 Over the Edge ‘New Writer of the Year Competition’ and she was the only entrant to have both her fiction and her poetry long-listed for the Doire Press ‘1st Annual International Fiction and Poetry Chapbook Competition’ in January 2012;‘Vision Painter’ went on to be short-listed in the fiction category. Under her pen name R J Samuel, she has published her first novel Heart Stopper in digital format and in hard copy on CreateSpace. She is currently working on her second novel Falling Colours. Her story 'Flowers in the Fountain' has been long listed for the Multi Story (UK) Flash Fiction competition and another, 'The Meal', got an Honourable Mention. Her poem 'Robes' was recently long listed for the Fish Poetry Prize.
http://www.rjsamuel.com/
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0076MERG8
http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/130332
Stephanie Klapp was born and reared in Kassel, Germany. She studied German and English at Kassel and Heidelberg Universities 1997-1998 and moved to Galway in summer of 1998. In 2009, she completed an MA in Culture and Colonialism at NUIG, with a thesis on colonial representations and gender roles in the Victorian adventure novel. She is currently working as a German and History teacher in a girls’ secondary school in Killiney, Dublin. Stephanie has been writing since childhood, and in 1995 she sold her first short-story to German teenage magazine BRAVO. She started workshops with Susan Millar DuMars in February 2010 at Galway Arts Centre, where she has also participated in poetry workshops facilitated by Kevin Higgins. Stephanie was long-listed for the Over the Edge New Writer of The Year award in both 2010 and 2011.
As usual there will be an open-mic after the Featured Readers have finished. New readers are always most welcome. The MC for the evening will be Susan Millar DuMars. For further details phone 087-6431748.
Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of Galway City Council & The Arts Council. http://overtheedgeliteraryevents.blogspot.com
Sunday, February 26, 2012
Salmon Publishing invites you to the Galway Launch of 'Mentioning The War' by Kevin Higgins
YOU ARE INVITED
to
The Galway Launch
of
Mentioning the War - essays and reviews (1999 -2011)
by Kevin Higgins
published by Salmon Publishing
The book be launched by Darrell Kavanagh
@ Galway Arts Centre, 47 Dominick Street, Galway
on Saturday, April 7th
LAUNCH STARTS: 3pm
ALL WELCOME
Best known for his dark, satirical poems; Kevin Higgins published his first book review in The Galway Advertiser in June 1999. Reading Mentioning the War, it becomes obvious that Higgins is not like other critics. An enthusiastic advocate for the work of the new generation of poets who have emerged from Ireland’s thriving live poetry scene; he is also a merciless opponent of hypocrisy and pretentiousness wherever he finds it. His writing is overtly political in a way that draws comparison with George Orwell – the subject of two extended essays here. It would be impossible to agree with everything in this book; it is a book which often disagrees with itself. But on subjects as diverse as socialist poetry and neoconservatism, funding for the arts and the anti-war movement, Higgins informs, infuriates and entertains, as any good critic should.
“There’s an arresting phrase, a new angle on a writer or a political position you thought you already knew about, in just about every piece here…The insights range from the literary to the existential to the seriously amusing…one of the things Mentioning the War offers, almost incidentally, is an insider’s account of how to learn to write.” John Goodby
KEVIN HIGGINS facilitates poetry workshops at Galway Arts Centre; teaches creative writing at Galway Technical Institute and on the Brothers of Charity Away With Words programme. He is also Writer-in-Residence at Merlin Park Hospital and the poetry critic of the Galway Advertiser. He was a founding co-editor of The Burning Bush literary magazine. His first collection of poems The Boy With No Face was published by Salmon in February 2005 and was short-listed for the 2006 Strong Award. His second collection, Time Gentlemen, Please, was published in March 2008 by Salmon. One of the poems from Time Gentlemen, Please, ‘My Militant Tendency’, featured in the Forward Book of Poetry 2009. His work also features in the anthology Identity Parade – New British and Irish Poets (Ed Roddy Lumsden, Bloodaxe, 2010). Frightening New Furniture is his third collection of poems and was published in 2010 by Salmon Poetry. Kevin has read his work at most of the major literary festivals in Ireland and at Arts Council and Culture Ireland supported poetry events in Kansas City, USA (2006), Los Angeles, USA (2007), London, UK (2007), New York, USA (2008), Athens, Greece (2008); St. Louis, USA (2008), Chicago, USA (2009), Denver, USA (2010), Washington D.C (2011), Huntington, West Virginia, USA (2011), Geelong, Australia (2011) & Canberra, Australia (2011). As part of his Culture Ireland supported trip to Chicago in February 2009 he participated in and took first place in a specially arranged poetry slam at the Chicago’s Green Mill Bar and Lounge, the birthplace of slam poetry. Kevin’s fourth collection of poetry, The Ghost In The Lobby, will be published by Salmon Poetry in 2013. Kevin is co-organiser of Over The Edge literary events.
Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Spring Creative Writing Classes at Galway Technical Institute
THE BEGINNERS CLASS WILL NOW START NEXT WEDNESDAY (MARCH 28th)
SO IT'S STILL POSSIBLE TO BOOK A PLACE
Creative Writing for Beginners with Kevin Higgins takes place one evening per week (Wednesday) from 7-9.30pm. (8 weeks). It commences on Wednesday, March 28th, 2012. Advance booking is essential. Places cost €120. Kevin Higgins will provide writing exercises for, and give gentle critical feedback to, those interested in trying their hand at writing poems, stories or memoir. Intermediate Creative Writing with Susan Millar DuMars takes place one evening per week (Tuesday) from 7-9.30pm (8 weeks) It commences on Tuesday, March 20th, 2012. Advance booking is essential. Places cost €120. This class is suitable for those who’ve participated in creative writing classes before or begun to have work published in magazines. Flexible exercises and work-shopping of assignments, together with the study of the works of published writers, will help each class member to find their own writing voice.
You can book a place in either class by calling to GTI, Father Griffin Road, Galway (10am-4pm) and paying with credit/debit card.
Places can be booked now via the G.T.I website http://www.gti.ie:5678/adulteducation/
People can also enroll at Galway Technical Institute on Tuesday March 20th, 5-7pm, using credit/debit card.
Monday, February 06, 2012
Gerry Potter (once known as Chloe Poems) returns to North Beach Poetry Nights
Not to be missed!
Gerry Potter (once known as Chloe Poems) returns
to North Beach Poetry Nights
on Monday 26th March
in the Crane Bar at 9 pm.
Gerry Potter is currently touring his new book of autobiographcal performance poetry 'Planet Middle Age', follow up to the successful 'Planet Young'. A favourite son of both Manchester and his home town Liverpool, Gerry has also been wowing audiences nationally with domestic-fantastic free verse. Gerry has a reputation for putting his Scouse voice on the line, a soaring sing-song accent, strong on poetry and strong on the causes of poetry. Creator and destroyer of the infamous gingham diva Chloe Poems, Gerry's new work is very different to his alter ego, though no less passionate. Performance meets theatre meets poetry and rhythm, creating a blistering soundscape of experience and entertainment.
Poets wishing to enter the Slam on the night need 2 max. three minutes poems.
The poem for the second round must be performed without a script.
The prize is a bottle of wine and entry to the North Beach Grand Slam in December.
Door: 5/3 Euro
Info: John @ 091-593290
North Beach Poetry Nights appreciates the continuing generous support of Galway City Council.
Saturday, February 04, 2012
March Over The Edge Writers’ Gathering at The Kitchen @ The Museum with Eamonn Harrigan, Kerrie O’Brien, Maureen Boyle, Bernie McGill & Deirdre Cartmill
Over The Edge in association with Poetry Ireland presents the March Over The Edge Writers’ Gathering with readings by poets and fiction writers Kerrie O’Brien, Maureen Boyle, Bernie McGill & Deirdre Cartmill. The centre piece of the evening will be the launch of Galway-based writer Eamonn Harrigan’s debut novel, Where The Dead Go. The event will take place at The Kitchen @ The Museum, Spanish Arch, Galway on Friday, March 9th, 8pm. All are welcome. There is no cover charge.
Eamonn Harrigan was shortlisted for new writer of the year in the Over the Edge competition. His first novel Where the Dead Go has just been published by Solstice Publishing. He did a Masters in Screenwriting in the Huston Film School NUIG and the Professional Programme in Screenwriting in UCLA. He has written two feature length screenplays and several short scripts.
Kerrie O' Brien has been published in various Irish and UK literary journals including Southword, Orbis and Crannóg. Her poem Blossoms was chosen as the winning entry in the Emerging Talent category of the 2011 iYeats Poetry Competition. She was also highly commended for the Over the Edge New Writer of The Year Competition 2011. Her new chapbook Out of the Blueness is now available on her website www.kerrieobrien.com
Bernie McGill's debut novel, The Butterfly Cabinet was published last year in the UK and Ireland by Headline Review and is published in the US by Free Press, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. She was the winner in 2008 of the prestigious Zoetrope: All-Story Short Fiction Award in the US. Her short stories have been shortlisted for numerous awards including the International Bridport Prize, the Sean O'Faolain Short Story Award, the Michael McLaverty Short Story Award and the Brian Friel Short Story Award. She also writes for theatre. She blogs at www.berniemcgill.com.
Maureen Boyle grew up in Sion Mills in County Tyrone, now lives in Belfast, and studied at Trinity College Dublin and the universities of East Anglia, London, University of Ulster and Queens. In 2004 she was runner-up in the Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Prize for an unpublished collection. She was awarded Arts Council bursaries in 2006, 2007 and 2009; and in 2007 she was awarded the Ireland Chair of Poetry Prize and the Strokestown International Poetry Prize. In 2011 she was awarded an ACES – Artist’s Career Enhancement Award - from the Arts Council Northern Ireland. She is completing her first collection of poems.
Deirdre Cartmill’s debut poetry collection Midnight Solo was published in 2004 and her second collection The Return of the Buffalo is forthcoming from Lagan Press. She received an ACES Award from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland in 2011 and spent a year affiliated with the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry at Queen’s. She’s previously received three Literature Awards from the Arts Council. Her work has been widely anthologised. She holds an MA with Distinction in Creative Writing from Queen’s University. She also writes in other mediums and tutors in creative writing as Deirdre Alexander. She is originally from Tyrone and currently lives in Belfast. You can find out more and read her blog at http://www.deirdrecartmill.com.
There is no entrance fee. The Kitchen @ The Museum has a wine licence.
For further information contact 087-6431748.
Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of the Arts Council
and Galway City Council
Friday, February 03, 2012
Novelist Chris Binchy for February 'Over The Edge: Open Reading'
Chris Binchy
The February ‘Over The Edge: Open Reading’ takes place in Galway City Library on Thursday, February 23rd, 6.30-8.00pm. The Featured Readers are Chris Binchy, Anne Irwin & Philip Abbink.
Chris Binchy was born in 1970. He studied English and Spanish at UCD and later graduated from the master's course in creative writing at Trinity College Dublin. He has published four novels. The Very Man was shortlisted for Irish Novel of the Year in 2003. Since then he has published People Like Us, Open-handed and in 2010 Five Days Apart was published by Harper Collins US. He lives in Dublin.
Anne Irwin was born in Ballyhaunis, Co. Mayo. She has lived in Galway since 1988. She studied English and Philosophy at U.C.G and is a practising Homeopath. She has been attending poetry workshops with Kevin Higgins for the past two years. Anne has previously read her poems at Clarinbridge Arts Festival, the 2011 NUI Galway Alumni literary evening and the Flat Lake Festival. She was long-listed in the Over The Edge New Writer of The Year competition in both 2010 and 2011. Her poetry has been published in the 2011 issue of the ROPES literary journal.
When Philip Abbink’s wife got a job in Ireland, he quit his job as a Canadian lawyer and became the official Writer in Residence at their new flat in Galway. The Residency funded writing classes at GTI and Galway Arts Centre. Philip has written short stories, children’s books, and an entire novel (if you add up two unrelated halves). Several stories have provoked polite rejections from respectable publications and one was shortlisted for the Over the Edge New Writer of the Year competition in 2011.
As usual there will be an open-mic after the Featured Readers have finished. New readers are always most welcome. The MC for the evening will be Susan Millar DuMars. For further details phone 087-6431748.
Wednesday, February 01, 2012
North Beach Poetry Nights with Stephen James Smith & Poetry Slam
North Beach Poetry Nights returns
on Monday 27th February
in the Crane Bar at 9 pm
with guest poet: Stephen James Smith
Stephen James Smith is a poet, playwright and a bit of a legend in Dublin. Not only has he won the Cúirt International Literary Festival Poetry Grand Slam, and numerous other awards. His ABSOLUTE Fringe play ‘Three Men Talking’ was shortlisted for the Bewley’s ‘Little Gem Award 2011’. In 2009 he proudly represented Ireland at the Vilenica Literary Festival Slovenia and in 2010 at Wiersze w Metrze Poland. In April 2011 he was invited by Culture Ireland to recite in the iconic Nuyorican Poetry Café New York. ‘Arise and Go!’ his debut album with musician Enda Reilly was selected by Hot Press as one of the best albums of 2011. He has been translated into six languages and published all over the globe. Most importantly he likes tea, shortbread, ice-cream and feeding the ducks in St. Stephens Green park.
"Stephen James Smith is a ball of hydrogen gas that should be pumped into every household across the land. He knocks seven shades of shite out of all the usual “birds and bees, whey and cheese” nonsense you find at poetry readings" - Jinx Lennon Punk Poet
Poets wishing to enter the Slam on the night need 2 max. three minutes poems. The poem for the second round must be performed without a script. The prize is a bottle of wine and entry to the North Beach Grand Slam in December.
Info: John Walsh @ 091-593290.
North Beach Poetry Nights appreciates the continuing generous support of Galway City Council.
Stephen James Smith is a poet, playwright and a bit of a legend in Dublin. Not only has he won the Cúirt International Literary Festival Poetry Grand Slam, and numerous other awards. His ABSOLUTE Fringe play ‘Three Men Talking’ was shortlisted for the Bewley’s ‘Little Gem Award 2011’. In 2009 he proudly represented Ireland at the Vilenica Literary Festival Slovenia and in 2010 at Wiersze w Metrze Poland. In April 2011 he was invited by Culture Ireland to recite in the iconic Nuyorican Poetry Café New York. ‘Arise and Go!’ his debut album with musician Enda Reilly was selected by Hot Press as one of the best albums of 2011. He has been translated into six languages and published all over the globe. Most importantly he likes tea, shortbread, ice-cream and feeding the ducks in St. Stephens Green park.
"Stephen James Smith is a ball of hydrogen gas that should be pumped into every household across the land. He knocks seven shades of shite out of all the usual “birds and bees, whey and cheese” nonsense you find at poetry readings" - Jinx Lennon Punk Poet
Poets wishing to enter the Slam on the night need 2 max. three minutes poems. The poem for the second round must be performed without a script. The prize is a bottle of wine and entry to the North Beach Grand Slam in December.
Info: John Walsh @ 091-593290.
North Beach Poetry Nights appreciates the continuing generous support of Galway City Council.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
2012 Over The Edge Poetry Book Showcase at The Kitchen @ The Museum
Moya Cannon
In this annual retrospective of the year just past, Galway-based poets who published a new collection of poems during 2011 are invited to read three poems from the collection in question. There will also be short readings from the anthologies Bicycles with Umbrellas (NUI Galway MA in Writing class of 2010), Monday Miscellany (Westside Writers) and Mosaic (Skylight Poets/Galway Arts Centre Advanced Poetry Workshop).
All welcome. There is no cover charge. For further details phone 087-6431748.
Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of The Arts Council and Galway City Council.
Friday, December 23, 2011
Over The Edge Celebrates Ninth Birthday with Reading by Leanne O’Sullivan, Damian Cunniffe & Dearbhaile Houston
Leanne O'Sullivan
The first Over The Edge: Open Reading of 2012 takes place in Galway City Library on Thursday, January 19th, 6.30-8.00pm. The Featured Readers are Dearbhaile Houston, Damian Cunniffe & Leanne O’Sullivan. This is a very special occasion as it is now exactly nine years since Over The Edge was born in Galway City Library in January 2003.Dearbhaile Houston grew up in Co. Galway. She is in her first year of New Media and English at the University of Limerick, learning the art of procrastination and strong coffee. She began attending Creative Writing classes with Susan Millar DuMars last spring and recently won the Seán Uí Riordáin prize for poetry in the Oireachtas na Gaeilge Literary Competition 2011.
Damian Cunniffe is from Abbeyknockmoy in North County Galway. In 2011 he was longlisted for the Fish Publishing International Short Story Prize, the Ink Tears Prize and was joint winner of the Lonely Voices Short Story Introductions competition run by the Irish Writers Centre. He was also runner-up in the fiction section of the 2011 Over The Edge New Writer Of The Year competition. His work has been published in Crannóg and the Cúirt Journal. Damien has had articles published in several newspapers, including the Galway Advertiser. He is currently working on a play and a collection of short stories.
Leanne O’Sullivan was born on the Beara Peninsula in west Cork in 1983, and now lives in Cork city. Her poetry collections are Waiting for My Clothes (2004) and Cailleach: The Hag of Beara (2009) both published by Bloodaxe Books. Her work has been included in various anthologies, including Selina Guinness’ The New Irish Poets and Billy Collins’s Poetry 180: A Turning Back to Poetry. In 2009 Leanne was awarded the Ireland Chair of Poetry bursary; in 2010 she won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature; and in 2011 she received the Lawrence O’Shaughnessy Award for Poetry.
As usual there will be an open-mic after the Featured Readers have finished. New readers are always most welcome. The MC for the evening will be Susan Millar DuMars. For further details phone 087-6431748.
Over The Edge acknowledges the ongoing generous financial support of Galway City Council & The Arts Council.
Writers At Work: A New Course With Susan Millar DuMars at Galway Arts Centre
Have you got pages in a drawer you’ve been wanting to show someone?
This course is for writers who are at work on a project. This could be a novel, short story, collection of stories, sequence of poems, or even a play or film script.
Participants’ only homework each week will be to read two fifteen page extracts from other students’ manuscripts and be prepared for a 20-30 minute discussion on same. Providing generous and specific feedback on others’ work helps us to be inspired risk takers in our own writing. Each participant will experience at least one such session of feedback on their own work. An in-class writing exercise at the start of each class will serve to further shake off mental cobwebs, and perhaps lead us into new writing.
This is an ideal course for the hardworking but isolated writer.
The course is takes place on Tuesdays (2-4pm) starting on Tuesday February 7th and runs for six weeks. Places must be booked in advance. The cost to participants is €85 with a concession rate of €75. To register contact Galway Arts Centre, 47 Dominick Street, Galway. Telephone 091-565886. Email: victoria@galwayartscentre.ie
Facilitator Susan Millar DuMars’ debut poetry collection, Big Pink Umbrella, was published by Salmon Poetry in 2008. Her next collection, Dreams for Breakfast, appeared in 2010. Her work features in Landing Places, Dedalus’ 2010 anthology of immigrant poetry written in Ireland; and also in The Best Of Irish Poetry 2010. A fiction writer as well, she published a collection of short stories, Lights In The Distance, with Doire Press in 2010. She has been the recipient of an Arts Council Literature Bursary for her stories. Susan teaches creative writing to adults and to groups with special needs. She lives in Galway, where she and her husband have run the Over the Edge readings series since 2003. Susan is currently at work on her third poetry collection, The God Thing, to be published in early 2013 by Salmon.
Sunday, December 11, 2011
New Year Creative Writing Classes at Galway Technical Institute - BEGINNERS & INTERMEDIATE
Creative Writing for Beginners with Kevin Higgins takes place one evening per week (Monday) from 7-9.30pm. (8 weeks) It commences on Monday, January 16th, 2012. Advance booking is essential. Places cost €120. Kevin Higgins will provide writing exercises for, and give gentle critical feedback to, those interested in trying their hand at writing poems, stories or memoir.
Intermediate Creative Writing with Susan Millar DuMars takes place one evening per week (Tuesday) from 7-9.30pm (8 weeks) It commences on Tuesday, January 17th, 2012. Advance booking is essential. Places cost €120. This class is suitable for those who’ve participated in creative writing classes before or begun to have work published in magazines. Flexible exercises and work-shopping of assignments, together with the study of the works of published writers, will help each class member to find their own writing voice.
To book a place in either class contact GTI, Father Griffin Road, Galway.
Places can be booked via the G.T.I website http://www.gti.ie:5678/adulteducation/
People can also enrol at Galway Technical Institute on Monday January 9th, 6.30-8.30pm, using credit/debit card.
Friday, December 09, 2011
Launch of 'Turning on a Sixpence' first poetry collection by Jack McCann
~~~~~
Launch
of
“Turning on a Sixpence”
The first book of poetry by Jack McCann who worked as Consultant Plastic Surgeon at Galway University Hospitals from 1989 to 2010.
on
Tuesday, 20 December at 1.30pm
Location: Arts Corridor of University Hospital Galway
~~~~~~~~~
Please confirm attendance with Margaret Flannery, Arts Officer, Galway University Hospitals Arts Trust on 091 544979 or 087 1250461.
Jack McCann was born in Rush, County Dublin in 1949, one of three children. He was brought up in Malahide and studied Medicine in UCD. After many years of training and travelling, he settled with his family in Galway in 1989 as a Consultant Plastic Surgeon. In 2004 he visited Albania for the first time and in 2005 he and his wife co-founded the charity “Irish Friends of Albania”. He has returned twice a year since then with teams of volunteers to work in hospitals and this has inspired many of his poems. In 2009 he joined Galway University Hospital Writers Group and is now a member of KARA Writers Group. He has written four plays and is currently working on his next collection of poetry. He retired from hospital practice in 2010 and now enjoys writing, farming, sailing and family. He has three adult children and two grandchildren, and lives with his wife Moya in Oughterard, County Galway.
Turning On A Sixpence is Jack's first publication.
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