Emily Cullen's Blog
August 18, 2023
Exciting news update: Poetry jukeboxes, author interviews, mentoring and upcoming festival appearance
How are you all keeping? And how are you enjoying these late-Summer weeks as the return to school looms on the horizon? I had no intention of leaving a six-month gap between my posts and am mildly shocked to discover my last one was back in February! How the months have flown with many exciting and diverse developments in poetry, creative writing and life in general (I had a milestone birthday, my son, Lee made his Confirmation and finished his primary schooling...). Rather than attempting to shape an article that links these many disparate events and attempts to find some cohesive thread, I'm going to highlight my literary news updates in pithy bullet points below, which I hope you enjoy reading!• I’m currently working on my fourth collection of poetry. In the meantime, I’m delighted that some new poems of mine have featured in a variety of journals between March – August 2023 including: Crannóg 58, Skylight 47 Issue 17, Cyphers 95 & Poetry Ireland Review 140
• I'm excited that my poem, "Bridget's Hope" can now be heard in Galway's Poetry Jukebox as part of the 'Poetry as Commemoration' initiative. The poem, which follows the thoughts of Cumann na mBan activist, 'Bridget', who is based in Athenry as the Truce is declared in July, 1921, was commissioned by Galway Public Libraries as part of their Decade of Centenaries programme. The Poetry Jukebox is a free sound installation, located outside Galway City Museum at the Spanish Arch, that features the work of eleven poets: Nithy Kasa, Attracta Fahy, my colleague at UL, Eoin Devereux, Dominic J Sweeney, Frances Browner, Aodan McArdle, Roisin Leggett Bohan, Michael Farry, Nuala Roche, Diarmuid Cawley and myself. You just choose the poem you wish to hear and crank the handle. Fabulous! Thanks so much to Catherine Wilson, Creative Producer of Poetry as Commemoration and to all involved in this unique project. Galway's Poetry Jukebox can be enjoyed for the next twelve weeks, from mid-August onward. To learn more about the Poetry as Commemoration project and its Poetry Jukebox visit www.poetryascommemoration.ie • Next week, I’m delighted to be returning to my home county, 'Lovely Leitrim', to read as part of the 2023 Drumshanbo Written Word festival at 8:00pm on Thursday, 24 August in the Mayflower Ballroom, Drumshanbo. I'll be reading alongside fellow Leitrim poets, Roisin Kelly and Mary Guckian and we'll also be chatting to author and journalist, Ronan McGreevy. Tickets cost €12 and are available from drumshanbowrittenword.ie • It was fun to catch up with multi award-winning UK poet, Roger Robinson over the Summer and to hear all about his most recent poetry projects. My interview with Roger was published in the June 2023 issue of The Honest Ulsterman and you can read it online here
• As part of Glór Art Centre's 'Artist to Artist Mentoring Scheme 2023', I was delighted to be selected to Mentor highly talented, emerging poet, Deirdre Devally. Thank you to Glór Arts Centre in Ennis, Co. Clare for their valuable work in supporting artists. I am holding four mentoring sessions with Deirdre between June and August 2023 and very much enjoying this journey with her. • I also mentored the lovely, gifted poet and artist, Aine Rose O'Connell during January & March 2023 as part of a training initiative by Age & Opportunity to support artists and that was an immensely enjoyable experience. I thoroughly enjoy mentoring other poets and it is always an honour when writers choose to work with me. • Back in April, for Poetry Day Ireland 2023, I hosted a special reading by the MA in Creative Writing students, members of UL Creative Writing team - Donal Ryan & Eoin Devereux -with guest poet, Anton Floyd at 1:00pm - 2:15pm in the Bourn Vincent Gallery, above the University Concert Hall, at the University of Limerick. This was a free event but all donations on the day went to the United Nations Refugee agency Ireland (UNHCR-Ireland).
• To mark the launch of his best-selling Irish novel, My Father's House, I had the great pleasure of interviewing author and Professor of Creative Writing, Joseph O'Connor in a special event at 4:00pm in the Bourn Vincent Gallery, Foundation Building, University of Limerick on Wednesday, 19 April 2023. As everyone knows, Joe is not only a truly inspiring author, but also a thoroughly engaging speaker who is also much loved by all his colleagues and students at UL. We continue to keep Joe and his family in our thoughts at this sad time after the recent tragic loss of his sister, Sinead O’Connor. Ar dheis Dé go raibh a hanam.





Published on August 18, 2023 16:17
February 22, 2023
Reading at the Limerick Literary Festival this Friday morning, 24 February

Published on February 22, 2023 09:00
October 31, 2022
Three new poems just published & reflection on a busy October
October has been frantically full, from start to finish, but also highly enjoyable. I'm typing this on the last day of the month - Halloween - as I get ready to submit student marks and before we carve our massive pumpkin after lunch. We still have a few final spooky decorations to festoon in the sitting room too. I can hardly believe it's a full month since renowned traditional Irish fiddler,
Eileen O'Brien
and I performed our commissioned work, 'Sionann: a suite' for its world premiere at the 2022 Dromineer Literary Festival in Nenagh Castle on Saturday, 1st October. I didn't get a spare moment to write about our project at the time, so it is a pleasure to reflect back on that occasion now and I'm delighted to share a few photos from the event, taken by talented photographer, Odhran Duchie.
Having both grown up on the banks of the river Shannon, in Dromineer and Carrick-on-Shannon respectively, Eileen and I created a suite in four movements and words that integrates an air, planxty, slip jig and reel as the river gracefully rises and flows toward Lough Derg and its estuary. Filled with fluvial resonances, 'The Shannon Suite' is our lyrical exploration of our topographic heritage. We set my poem 'I am Sionann' (available to read
here
) to an original score and performed it live on harp and fiddle. During our recital, we also celebrated the 230th anniversary of the famous 'last gathering of the harpers' at the 1792 Belfast Harp Festival, which continues to inspire my writing (listen to my piece for RTE Radio 1's Sunday Miscellany during August
here
). It was at this historic event that Edward Bunting transcribed many well known airs, preserving much Irish music for posterity. Eileen and I played a mix of traditional airs that were performed by the 1792 harpers and passed on to Bunting to notate, including 'Carolan's Concerto', collected from Arthur O'Neill. We were thrilled with the audience response to our performance and our new suite - we got a standing ovation and many compliments after. You can enjoy more photos from the event and from many of the other memorable events of the festival at their gallery here. Congratulations to Chairperson, Geraldine McNulty, to Geraldine Cronin and to all the festival team on another super banquet of words and music and thank you again for bringing Eileen and I together for this highly enjoyable collaboration. During October, three more new poems of mine were published. Firstly my sonnet, 'Your Old Letters' features in
Romance Options
, the sparkling new anthology of love poems edited by Joe Woods and Leanne Quinn and published by Dedalus Press. More recently, during the past week, my poem '
I am Hawthorn
' was featured on The Milk House, edited by Ryan Dennis. Lastly, my sonnet 'Anxiety of Influence' has just come out in Issue 7 of the ever-fresh Drawn to the Light, edited and published by the indefatigable Orla Fay and freely available to download here. Happy Halloween, happy reading and I hope you enjoy the poems!



Published on October 31, 2022 05:10
October 23, 2022
Circling the Square - paying tribute to the late Dennis O'Driscoll
What a memorable day we had yesterday, honouring
Dennis O'Driscoll
at 'Circling the Square', the inaugural Thurles Poetry Festival. It is 10 years since we lost this great poet and Thurles native and credit is due to local poet,
Larry Doherty
for his vision and tireless efforts to curate such a special day of readings and music with a staggering line up of participants.(Pictured below: Emily Cullen, Eleanor Hooker, John Noonan & Declan O'Driscoll)
Dennis O'Driscoll (1954-2012) was an Irish poet, essayist, critic and editor. Regarded as one of the best European poets of his time, Dennis left a legacy of nine poetry collections, three chapbooks and two books of essays and reviews. Among his awards were a Lannan Literary Award in 1999, the 2005 E.M. Forster Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the 2006 O’Shaughnessy Award for Poetry from the Center for Irish Studies (Minnesota). A member of Aosdána, the Irish academy of artists, he worked for almost forty years in Ireland’s Revenue and Customs service. He died suddenly on Christmas Eve, 2012, aged 58. Lovingly referred to as “the Irish Larkin,” the majority of his poems were characterised by the use of economic language and the recurring motifs of mortality and the fragility of everyday life. Read his striking poem "Someone" here. His was truly a singular voice, full of 'forgiving humanity' and it was an honour to be part of this exciting new festival and to hear such an array of esteemed poets and musicians, including Eleanor Hooker, Michael Coady, Anne Haverty, Michael Durack, John Noonan, Ger Duffy, Breda Joyce and many more. We each shared 2 poems from Dennis's oeuvre which reminded us of his distinct, timeless vision. A special highlight for me was hearing the poet's brother, Declan O’Driscoll share anecdotes about Dennis and read his well-known poem about his hometown, simply entitled “Thurles”. If you're not already familiar with this poem, I urge you to seek it out for its subtle power, unsentimental tone and its fresh lines such as ‘…but I know where the colander is kept…’ which evoke those minute, idiosyncratic details of home. Indeed, why not immerse yourself in the world of Dennis O'Driscoll and treat yourself to his
Collected Poems
, published by Carcanet Press in 2017.




Published on October 23, 2022 15:41
May 24, 2022
UL Creative Writing Festival - a banquet of writers and word-music
It is Tuesday morning already and I’m still lolling in the lilt of language, lingering in the spell cast by many wonderful writers during the past, full weekend of the 2022 UL Creative Writing Festival. It’s no exaggeration to say that I’m trying to sustain the timbres of the past weekend where we were treated to note-perfect readings by novelists, Kevin Barry, Lisa McInerney, Roddy Doyle, Kit de Waal, Sarah Moore Fitzgerald, Danielle McLaughlin, Louise Kennedy, Donal Ryan and Sebastian Barry – not to mention poets, Seán Hewitt, Kayssie K, Jane Clarke, Rachael Hegarty, Chiamaka Enyi-Amadi and, last but not least, myself. (You can read the brilliantly atmospheric story Kevin Barry read, "The Pub with No Beer", in April's edition of The New Yorker here) I was wearing a few hats: as poetry curator, introducing our guest poets, as staff member of the teaching team on the MA in Creative Writing and as a reader and festival participant myself. The glow of camaraderie, love of great writing and mutual support that travelled between my Creative Writing colleagues and all the students on the MA in Creative Writing danced infectiously around the Irish World Academy of Music; audiences could clearly sense the magical atmosphere that exists on the MA in Creative Writing programme, where great teaching goes hand-in-hand with great mentorship. The Festival - completely sold out for the weekend - was a roaring success with a closing event, on Sunday afternoon, which saw two maestros, Sebastian Barry and Donal Ryan, reading from their work-in-progress (a first for the former, who only reads published work before and audience) and introduced so warmly and memorably by another giant and gent, Joseph O'Connor. The queue for the book signing table after was a mile long and many festival attendees, like myself, retreated to the nearby Pavilion restaurant to stay in the orbit of word-music and image a little longer, to prolong the magic of the weekend. My sincere thanks to my lovely colleagues for all their hard work, to the poets and writers who performed and spoke so honestly about the writing life and to everyone who contributed to this masterful Festival in any way, big or small. Here's to it all happening again in 2023! Below are a few photos captured over the course of the weekend.
Published on May 24, 2022 03:59
May 17, 2022
Reading at the Eco Showboat Pavilion, Dromineer tomorrow
The
Eco Showboat
will dock at Dromineer harbour, Co. Tipperary tomorrow (Wednesday, 18 May) as part of Tipperary Bealtaine Festival. The brainchild of artists Anne Cleary and Denis Connolly of the innovative School of Looking, the duo have been working on the transformation of a century-old heritage barge into a zero-carbon vessel suitable for Eco Showboat expeditions on our inland waterways. A floating art studio and science lab, the Eco Showboat aims to connect communities in building a zero-carbon future. I'm delighted to be reading with
Eleanor Hooker
tomorrow at the Poetry Pavilion alongside the Eco Showboat. A packed programme of free events is promised with registration in advance essential. See the
event page here
for all details. Hope you can join us! Here's a poem of mine, on the theme of ecological awareness, that was published last year in the
Empty House: Poetry and Prose on the Climate Crisis
anthology (edited by Alice Kinsella and Nessa O'Mahony, Doire Press, 2021). "Adam's Apple" was inspired by the contrast between our Western myth of origins, which positions us as masters lording it over the Earth, and those of some First Nations peoples, whose beliefs have always been in much closer harmony with our planet. And how striking that one of our most famous economists in history was baptized 'Adam' Smith!

Published on May 17, 2022 07:17
April 22, 2022
April is Poetry Month - four very full weeks of events!
Welcome back to my blog. This month is gloriously full with literary activities and poetry events. Below is a list of recent events I participated in and upcoming readings during Poetry Month. Some are in-person events and some are live online and all are free. I hope you can join me! Literary Events - April 2022: Poetry Readings • Wednesday, 27 April: Limerick Writers’ Centre ‘April is Poetry Month’ reading at 7:00pm, Sexton’s Bar, 91 Henry St, Limerick – reading with Eoin Devereux & Michael Durack. • Poetry Day Ireland - Thursday, 28 April: Launch of The Limerick Broadsheet – ‘April is the Cruellest Month’ – curated by Eoin Devereux and featuring work by Donal Ryan, Denise Chaila, Emily Cullen, Kerrie O’Brien, Willzee, John Liddy, Martin Dyar, Jo Slade, Imelda Maguire, Kieran Beville and Eoin Devereux at 1:00pm, The Atrium, University Concert Hall Building, University of Limerick. • Poetry Day Ireland - Thursday, 28 April: Featured poet for Lime Square Poets at 8:00pm online. See event details here: https://www.limesquarepoets.com/event... • Saturday, 30 April: Inishboffin Arts Festival - times tbc
Event Facilitation / Public Interviews with Authors • Friday, 1 April: Interview with authors, Nuala O’Connor (Nora) and Raymond Burke (Joyce County) for the ‘Nora Barnacle and James Joyce – The Galway Story’ event (One Dublin One Book) at 6:30pm in St. Nicholas Collegiate Church, Galway • Saturday, 9 April: Introduction of, and interview with, poet Roger Robinson at 8:30pm in the Town Hall Theatre for Cúirt International Festival of Literature

Published on April 22, 2022 02:12
Enjoying my exciting role at UL
Happy Poetry Month! I'm delighted to report that my post as Meskell UL-Fifty Poet in Residence at the University of Limerick’s Creative Writing programme is gloriously busy and immensely enjoyable. The role is quite specific: I teach on aspects of poetic technique on the MA in Creative Writing, supervise MA students, offer feedback on their writing and contribute to various literary and outreach projects on the campus. My colleagues have all been so warm and welcoming since I started on 31st January and, because my passion for teaching poetry and mentoring younger writers is part of my own poetry practice, the combination of the creative and the academic is an ideal fit. It became apparent to me, early on, that there is a significant need for this kind of work at UL, both to mentor and support new creative writers, specifically poets, and to play a role in positioning poetry as an integral part of the University. In response to requests from the students about particular areas of interest, I enjoyed leading a series of poetry seminars for all MA students on aspects of prosody and poetic technique that focused on: tone, voice, diction, building tension and surprise, line breaks, punctuation, revision, ending poems and preparing a manuscript for publication. These 2-hour seminars were part-lecture, part-practical workshop and included in-class freewriting and the provision of feedback on poems in progress. I was recently interviewed about my role and about the importance of poetry by Jim Miley of the Association of Irish Universities and you can view our brief conversation here I am also delighted to be part of a series of five women poets invited to read for the Limerick Literary Festival in honour of the wonderful Kate O’Brien and to celebrate ‘April is Poetry Month’ in Limerick. Here is my poem entitled “Time” My next post will give more information about events I am taking part in for Poetry Month.
Published on April 22, 2022 02:00
December 16, 2021
Exciting announcement: appointed Poet in Residence at the University of Limerick
I am thrilled to share the news that I have been appointed Lecturer / Poet in Residence at the University of Limerick. My role will involve teaching Creative Writing, supervising postgraduate work, organising some literary events and personal creative writing projects. I cannot wait to start in the new Spring semester, 2022. I view the teaching of Creative Writing and mentorship of other writers as integral to my creative practice and literary citizenship and so this is a dream post for me. The inspirational poet-teacher, Theodore Roethke once observed that "teaching is an act of love, a spiritual cohabitation, one of the few sacred relationships left in a crass secular world" and I completely agree with him. I am truly looking forward to working with the Creative Writing students at UL and with the sensational team at the School of English, Irish & Communication. My appointment was announced in The Irish Times today.
To read the full article, please click on this link.

Published on December 16, 2021 15:27
November 23, 2021
Twitter thread reveals identity of a muse
Thanks to a conversation on Twitter today, which was brought to my attention since my own Twitter account is currently inactive, I now have a very good idea of the identity of my muse on the bicycle with the hula hoop that day in Salthill who inspired "Poise" from my collection,
Conditional Perfect
(Doire Press, 2019)... She, la petite Francaise, it must surely be... This doesn't happen every day and I'm grateful to the wonderful Martina Callanan of Galway Cycling Campaign, for shedding light on the mystery. May those spokes keep turning!


Published on November 23, 2021 09:26