Nuala Ní Chonchúir's Blog, page 39

March 4, 2014

NOVEL COVER REVEALED!

Here is the cover design for The Closet of Savage Mementos , my new novel, out April 7th. Dublin launch April 15th. Galway launch TBC. Whee! Thanks to designer Nina Lyons and all at New Island.

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Published on March 04, 2014 01:25

March 3, 2014

ARENA REVIEW OF LORRIE MOORE TONIGHT

I'm on Arena tonight, RTE Radio 1, reviewing Lorrie Moore's new short story collection, Bark.
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Published on March 03, 2014 05:39

LISTOWEL WRITERS' WEEK INTERVIEW

I'm directing the Short Story Workshop at Listowel Writers' Week this year. They did a Q&A with me in advance. The first questions went as follows and the rest is here.

Q. Did you know from a young age that you would be a writer?

A. I was writing from a young age but I thought that writers were hallowed people with some inside knowledge of how to be a writer and get published and that I didn’t have that. I wanted to be a writer but didn’t think it was possible for ordinary people like me. My love of writing grew from my love of reading. I was reading from the age of three; my parents are book-lovers. Books were more important to me than anything as a kid. Coming second in a national poetry competition at the age of nine (with a poem in Irish about Travellers) gave me the confidence to keep writing. But I was in my late twenties before I knuckled down and got very serious about it all.
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Published on March 03, 2014 00:46

February 28, 2014

WRITER AS GERBIL

I feel like a gerbil running on a wheel. A rather large gerbil, mind...

I am finished final edits on Novel 2, The Closet of Savage Mementos and am just awaiting final proofs before it goes on its merry way to the printer. Whoop! There will be launches in Dublin and Galway in April. In the course of this last edit I discovered (thanks to Deirdre O'Neill, my lovely editor) that my obssesion-words while writing it were hover, grunt and manic. Ahem.

It's weird the way your relationship with a manuscript changes the closer it becomes to being a book. Doubly odd on this one, maybe, because it was inspired by very personal events in my life when I was a mere 22 year old. So I love the novel, then I don't, then I want to bury it, then I want to tell people about it constantly because I feel so affectionate towards it. Mostly, I want to see the final cover and, then, the final book. Maybe then I can start to 'own' it.

Meantime I am rewriting Novel 3, Miss Emily, using a list of suggestions from my editors in Penguin USA and Penguin Canada. It is close work and enormously rewarding. I am plunged back into Emily Dickinson's world and it is a place I am very happy to go. I heart research.

In the midst of all this I am enjoying the buzz around the spring issue of The Stinging Fly (I edited the fiction section) which came out this week and will be launched in March. And I'm looking forward to taking part in the Publishing Day at the IWC next Saturday, the 8th March. It promises to be a great event. The Penguin Irl Director will be there as well as a UK literay agent, poetry experts and there will be a writers' panel, which I am taking part in.

I'll be on Arena on RTÉ Radio 1 on Monday night reviewing Bark , the new story collection from wonder-writer Lorrie Moore. Oh, Lorrie, please be my BFF. (Does anyone else become convinced they would get along brilliantly with all their favourite writers?)

Also I am busy prepping for the launch of After Garbally, by Group 8, the exhibition by my artist collective here in Ballinasloe on the 14th March. It's full steam ahead with preps for that at the moment.

There are a hundred other things waving flags in my general direction and I'll get to them anon, so if you are waiting for something from me (a blurb, an edit, a hello) hang in there, I'll be with you soon!
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Published on February 28, 2014 07:57

February 27, 2014

3 DAYS TO GO ON FUNDIT!

 
Our FundIt campaign continues. 3 days to go! Only €590 to raise! Please help if you can.
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Published on February 27, 2014 11:55

February 24, 2014

IRISH PEN DINNER - PICS & AFTERS

Sebastian BarryMy husband and I went to the Irish PEN Dinner to honour Frank McGuinness on Friday night. He received the 2014 Irish PEN Award for Outstanding Achievement in Irish Literature. The event was held in the very swish surroundings of the Royal Yacht Club in Dun Laoghaire and we had fun getting dressed up and sallying forth. We were welcomed with a delicious glass of Cabernet Sauvignon and we sat in the beautiful Formal Bar, saying hello to the (few) people we knew and spotting the celebs among the guests.

Frank McGuinnessI don't personally know Frank, but I'm a member of Irish PEN and was happy to be there on his big night. Sebastian Barry, a long standing friend of Frank's, gave the award speech and it was theatrical and moving, as you might expect. (Sebastian B, who seems to be getting younger as the years pass, however he does it, has a novel out this year - The Temporary Gentleman.) He called Frank, 'the fullest example of a gifted man' with 'an admirable and exemplary biography'. He also said he was 'the perfect example of the artist and the man'.
Vanessa Fox O'Loughlin, Vice Chair of Irish PEN and Director at writing.ieFrank thanked the Abbey, other theatres, his agent and all of his publishers, singling out his poetry publisher Peter Fallon as 'a gentle leader'. He spoke of Íde Ní Laoghaire, his editor at Brandon, and said she is 'the most wise and watchful and, in the best possible sense, threatening of editors'. By the time he thanked his parents (no longer living), saying 'I salute you tonight' the whole room was dabbing at their eyes.
Me enjoying wine in the Formal Bar
We were at the young people's table (it seems!), though as middle-agers how we ended up there I do not know. It was lovely to chat to the fabulous youngsters at our table (mostly MA candidates from UCD), one of whom has also just secured a deal with Penguin. We both vowed to get penguin tattoos on our ankles ;)
At each PEN event an empty chair is placed in the room to symbolise writers who can't be present because they are imprisoned, detained, disappeared, threatened or killed. It was a lovely night of fancy clothes and not-too-fancy chatter, made all the nicer by the beautiful surroundings and glow of good feeling towards Frank McGuinness.
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Published on February 24, 2014 23:00

Date With an Agent @ The Dublin Writers Festival

In association with The Inkwell Group and Writing.ie, The Dublin Writers Festival 'Date With An Agent' is Ireland’s largest ever talent-spotting event. They are looking for 60 top quality authors to pitch their work to 5 leading literary agents keen to sign new talent. To be in with a chance to take part in the event, submit the first 10,000 words of your  book in hard copy with a 1,000 word synopsis, a 500 word author biography and the completed Application Form (available from the Dublin Writers Festival website) and €10 entry fee (if using TicketSolve, include a copy of your ticket) – please ensure that ONLY your book title is on the pages of your submission as all applications will be judged anonymously.Submissions to the event will be assessed by Vanessa Fox O’Loughlin and a team of consultants from The Inkwell Group. Experienced literary scouts Inkwell have assisted award winning and bestselling authors to publication and will be reading every application, matching the selected authors in each category to agents:Faith O’Grady of the Lisa Richards Agency (general and commercial fiction)Simon Trewin, Partner and Head of Literary at WME (literary & short fiction)Madeleine Milburn, Madeleine Milburn Literary TV & Film Agency (crime fiction)Sallyanne Sweeney of Mulcahy Associates (young adult)Polly Nolan of the Greenhouse Literary Agency (picture books up to middle grade)Please staple the synopsis and chapters together firmly, and the Application Form and author biography together seperately from the chapters. The closing date for applications is midnight on 27th March, please ensure you allow sufficient time for delivery. Items postmarked up to 26th March will be accepted.Please note you may be asked to supply additional material.Successful applicants will take part in a full day workshop,  (inclusive of lunch and all refreshments, this will cost €50 ). Two places will be subsidised by writing.ie for the unwaged and will be available at a 50% discount.Day FormatThe day will open with a panel discussion where the selected authors can find out what the agents are looking for, what’s hot at the moment and quiz them in a Q&A session.Then the pitching begins.In a speed-dating style event, each author will have 10 minutes to pitch their book and discuss their work face to face with an agent who is expert in their genre. Where relevant agents will request to see full manuscripts or make recommendations for project development.While the pitching takes place, Vanessa Fox O’Loughlin will discuss what catches an agents eye, how the publishing process works, and give tips on creating an author profile to the remainder of the group.10.00 Writers Arrive – coffee, meet and mingle.10.30 Agent Panel11.15 Q&A12.00 Buffet lunch – meet the agents in an informal setting1.00 Pitch event3.30 15 minute break for coffee5.30 Final wrapRules, Terms & Conditions here.
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Published on February 24, 2014 03:34

February 20, 2014

FLASH FRONTIER - CONVO WITH ETHEL ROHAN

Myself, Ethel Rohan and Dan Powell, talk about flash and stories in Flash Frontier . Thank you for having us, Rae Joyce!
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Published on February 20, 2014 08:16

February 18, 2014

EMMA DONOGHUE IN CONVERSATION - DWF - MARCH


DWF presents the fabulous Emma Donoghue in conversation with the wonderful Edel Coffey in March.

Venue: The Printworks
Time: 2.30pm, 29th March
 
Tickets: €12 / €10 concession

“Donoghue's historical novels kindle imaginative worlds from the embers of forgotten lives.”
The Guardian

"Emma Donoghue shows more than range with Frog Music – she shows genius."
Darin Strauss

‘You cannot predict literary success,’ said Emma Donoghue in a recent interview. ‘The only way you can possibly aim for it is to do your thing and do it well.’ For twenty years, Donoghue has been doing her thing well in novels, short stories and plays set everywhere from fifteenth-century Scotland to 1970s Dublin, but it was only with the publication of Room in 2010 that she was propelled into the literary stratosphere. That novel, inspired by the Josef Fritzl case, told the harrowing story of a little boy who spends his life imprisoned in a room. Shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, it was a life-changing success that won her a huge new readership, but since then Donoghue has continued to plough her own path. Her new novel, Frog Music, again draws on real events to tell the story of Blanche Beunon, a burlesque dancer living in San Francisco in the stifling summer of 1876. When her friend Jenny Bonnet is shot dead through the window of a train, Blanche risks everything to find the killer, plunging herself into a world of bohemian lowlifes and uncovering the secret life of Jenny herself, a character who breaks the law every morning, simply by getting dressed.

Book here.
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Published on February 18, 2014 01:37

February 17, 2014

STUFF OF DREAMS - PENGUIN DEAL

Celebratory presents!I am living my fantasy just now - Penguin USA and Penguin Canada are going to publish my third novel, Miss Emily, which is about Emily Dickinson and her Irish maid. All thanks to my supersonic agent. There was even an auction! Most definitely the stuff of dreams.

The lovely Glynne Arms, HawardenI received the news in Wales on Tuesday the 4th where I was in residence at the Gladstone's Library in Hawarden. My fellow resident and friend, writer Tania Hershman, bought me champagne and Creme Eggs to celebrate. Isn't that the sweetest? We then went to the pub in the village, The Glynne Arms, with fellow writers Neil Griffiths, Rebecca Abrahams, and Philip Clement, who interns at the library.

My week in Gladstone's was wonderful (beautiful food, great company, long walks in the castle park) though taking updates via phone from the USA, and chatting with various editors, had my head turned backwards. TG I managed to get done what I needed to do each day before New York woke up. It was (is) a whirlwind. And I feel utterly blessed.

There was more champagne (a magnum!) - and tulips - waiting for me at home when I got back from Wales. Myself, my husband, the kids, and my ex- raised a glass (or three) and I felt super lucky all over again. Penguin announced the deal in the USA today so I am finally allowed talk about it. Relief!

This is what Publishers Weekly wrote today in its Book Deals section:

O’Connor Channels Dickinson for Penguin
Penguin’s Tara Singh Carlson took U.S. rights, at auction, to Nuala O’Connor’s debut novel, Miss Emily. Grainne Fox at Fletcher & Company brokered the deal, and said the novel is reminiscent of The Girl with the Pearl Earring. The work is told through the dueling perspectives of Emily Dickinson and her Irish maid, Ada Concannon, as their lives intertwine. Adrienne Kerr at Penguin Canada preempted Canadian rights to the book.
Yes, I am reverting to my birth name for this book. Much easier for my North American friends to pronounce and spell, after all.
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Published on February 17, 2014 04:51

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