Europe through literature discussion

28 views
2025 - Nominations > 2025 - (Jan/Feb) Nominations for Lit from Ireland

Comments Showing 1-18 of 18 (18 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
In the first two months of 2025 we will be reading literature from Ireland.

Titles for all three categories (classic, contemporary and short story/essay) can be nominated in this thread.

Feel free to discuss availability here as well, i.e. let us know beforehand if a nominated title is unavailable for you before we put up the polls.


message 2: by Sharon (last edited Dec 19, 2024 12:27PM) (new)

Sharon I'd like to nominate a short story collection, by William Trevor, The News From Ireland The News from Ireland and Other Stories by William Trevor


message 3: by Caroline (new)

Caroline Duggan | 2 comments I nominate The Bee Sting (contemporary)


message 4: by Jen (new)

Jen R. (rosetung) | 65 comments I nominate Handiwork by Sara Baume. This could be contemporary or essays I guess?


message 5: by Claire (new)

Claire Dunlap | 2 comments Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan contemporary/short story


message 6: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
Sharon wrote: "I'd like to nominate a short story collection, by William Trevor, The News From Ireland The News from Ireland and Other Stories by William Trevor"

Thanks for recommending William Trevor, Sharon. I hope the title is still available in some libraries - amazon does not have it...


message 7: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
Caroline wrote: "I nominate The Bee Sting (contemporary)"

The title won the Booker last year as far as I know and sounds like fun!


message 8: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (last edited Dec 21, 2024 08:50AM) (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
Jen wrote: "I nominate Handiwork by Sara Baume. This could be contemporary or essays I guess?"

I read Sara Baume's A Line Made By Walking a couple of years ago as it was nominated for the Goldsmiths Prize in 2017. It was good and a bit experimental.


message 9: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
Claire wrote: "Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan contemporary/short story"

Another Booker prize title (one of last year's nominees), also sounds interesting!


message 10: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Orgeluse wrote: "Sharon wrote: "I'd like to nominate a short story collection, by William Trevor, The News From Ireland The News from Ireland and Other Stories by William Trevor"

Thanks for recomm..."

Oh my, I didn't check as I have a beloved copy. Might be better to un-nominate and just suggest it as a very good book. Happy Holidays!


message 11: by Sharon (last edited Dec 24, 2024 07:46AM) (new)

Sharon Instead of the William Trevor book, The News from Ireland, which is unavailable on Amazon, I nominate This Is Happiness by Niall Williams. Contemporary.


message 12: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
Sharon wrote: "Instead of the William Trevor book, The News from Ireland, which is unavailable on Amazon, I nominate This Is Happiness by Niall Williams. Contemporary."

Thank you, Sharon, for the renomination!


message 13: by Anetq (new)

Anetq | 79 comments Anything by Clare Keegan really - she's amazing!
I still haven't read So Late in the Day: Stories of Women and Men


message 14: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
Hi all!
To sum up the nomination process, we have the following titles to be read in the upcoming two months (and beyond :)):

Contemporary reads:
The Bee Sting by Paul Murray
Winner of the Booker Prize in 2023

This Is Happiness by Niall Williams
Walter Scott Prize Nominee for Historical Fiction Longlist


novellas:
Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
(winner of two prizes in 2022)

Handiwork by Sara Baume
(experimental novella)

Short story collections:
So Late in the Day: Stories of Women and Men by Claire Keegan


As we are only a handful of participants in this thread and all the nominated titles are worth reading, I have decided that all titles that have been nominated are selected as group reads for Irish literature :)

I will open up three different threads according to the three categories, where you can comment on and exchange your thoughts about the respective titles you have nominated.

Enjoy reading!


message 15: by Jen (new)

Jen R. (rosetung) | 65 comments I think “novella” would imply fiction but Handiwork is nonfiction.


message 16: by Anetq (new)

Anetq | 79 comments Orgeluse wrote: "As we are only a handful of participants in this thread and all the nominated titles are worth reading, I have decided that all titles that have been nominated are selected as group reads for Irish literature :)"

Oooh excellent: In the optimism of a new reading year: Maybe I'll read more of these :)

If anyone is interested in the sordid and frankly quite insane history of Ireland, I really recommend this book We Don't Know Ourselves: A Personal History of Modern Ireland by Fintan O'Toole
I really enjoyed it - and I usually can't be bothered with history books, but this is told in little thematic episodes all weaving a picture of Ireland.


message 17: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (last edited Dec 28, 2024 04:58AM) (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
Jen wrote: "I think “novella” would imply fiction but Handiwork is nonfiction."

Oops! Yes, I agree to some extent that this book might be considered non-fiction, but as her language and her communicative strategies are to be found more in the realm of fiction than non-fiction I am tempted to consider this as a "something in between" :))


message 18: by Orgeluse, Contemporary reads (new)

Orgeluse | 567 comments Mod
Anetq wrote: "Orgeluse wrote: "As we are only a handful of participants in this thread and all the nominated titles are worth reading, I have decided that all titles that have been nominated are selected as grou..."

Thanks for recommending the book by Fintan O'Toole!
And: Drawing conclusions from activities in this group this year I thought this was the best solution :)


back to top