Ready money is Aladdin's lamp - The John Murray Archive

The Ireland Literature Guide is an Irish online resource for Literature from Ireland
Poetry Ireland presents a reading of the poetry of John Betjeman.
With Anthony Cronin, Derek Mahon and guests.
Unitarian Church, 112 St. Stephen¹s Green West, Dublin 2
August 28th, 7pm, Admission Free
Tel . 01 478 9974, email poetry@iol.ie
Where is all this money coming from? There is now a sudden boom of money being poured into the lack-lustre causing many to become aware of the fact that as the money in Ireland grew the ability to produce art of any value diminshed. Please be aware of the fact you can't buy culture you can only sell it.
With a total prize fund of €45,000, the annual Glen Dimplex New Writers Awards will offer unprecedented support and exposure for emerging writers in a range of genres. Awards will be made to the best first book published by an author within each of the following four categories: Fiction, Poetry, Children’s literature and Biography/Non-fiction. A fifth special category will be The Irish Writers’ Centre Award for the best first book published in any genre in the Irish language. The Glen Dimplex New Writer of the Year 2006 will be chosen from the five category winners. Each category winner will receive a prize of €5,000. There will also be an overall award for the Glen Dimplex New Writer of the Year with a prize of €20,000. The Glen Dimplex New Writers Awards are organised in association with the Irish Writers’ Centre and will be judged by a fifteen-strong judging panel which will include Colm Tóibín.
The winners of the inaugural Glen Dimplex New Writers Awards will be announced at a presentation ceremony on 2 November 2006 at The Four Seasons Hotel, Ballsbridge,
The ceremony will be attended by all leading literary figures in the publishing industry. Myles Dungan of RTE will be the Master of Ceremonies and John O’Donoghue, Minister for Arts, Sport and Tourism, is our guest of honour.
The Pittsburgh Irish and Classical Theatre are about to put on 19 of Samuel Beckett's plays. This is a terribel idea and one which no doubt the great 'Shem' himself would be against. Running so many of his plays together will cause an Andy Warhol type repetitive print for consumer access to often very disturbing and very moving plays. I am all for popular access but for plays that were so extreme in the dictates of their presentation, to present them in this manner seems to run contrary to the wishes and perhaps the goal of their creator.
Allegiance to new Irish Nationalism?
The Francis MacManus Short Story competition is quite a well known and well contested prize of thousands of euro for on-air short stories. The interesting thing about this competition is that the results will be read out on air which mught change the format of the story. It could be that these stories may end up more like radio-plays due to the fact that they will be presented on and maybe for Radio. I bet that the winning story, not mine, will have plenty of dialogue. Details below:
Your chance of asking a question to Irish poet Seamus Heaney or British playwright Harold Pinter is getting less and less. Tickets for the readings by both Nobel Prize winners at this year's Edinburgh International Book Festival are getting scarce. However, it might not be a huge miss if Heaney insists on banging on about the Scotch-Irish and how there is a line drawn between Ireland and Britain and all those above it are us and everybody below is them. Pinter on the other hand could go into stories about touring plays in Ireland with McMasters all those years ago.
Irish playwright Frank McGuinness’ Gates Of Gold, exploring the relationship between Hilton Edwards and Michael MacLiammoir, the founders of Dublin’s Gate theatre, runs from 21 November to 16 December 2006 at the Trafalgar. It is a play that illustrates how the Wildean lifestyle of the two theatre lights made it possible for a generation of Irish to old their head up in Europe. The humour of the play is always black and bitter but very funny none the less. This is a good play to illustrate McGuiness' view of women in the role of Kassie which is outstanding in its mother Russian nurse maid conventions.
In an artice for New Left Review, the literary critic Terry Eagleton tries to frame an argument for the writings of Samuel Beckett being political out of the fact that Beckett faught with 'Gloria' in the French Resistence. Terry, this is rubbish.
Roger Casement shared a tent with Joseph Conrad in the Congo and became the
"But O that I were young again
I have a book that I read only in bank queues. I take it with me whenever I have to go to Bank of Ireland and did at one stage get through an entire chapter while in the queue. At the moment it is Liam O'Flaherty's 'The Informer', no irony intended.
This is one of the first Irish poems I read and I think at this time in world history it may be time to read it again. It reminds us that there are those who are right now cowering before the standard issue and will afterwards seem to us as different and as distant as the forgotten everyday.
He performs a one-man show out of extracts from Irish writers: Swift, Wilde, Shaw, Yeats, O’Casey and Synge, that highlights the serious and sometimes humorous aspects of their work.