I’m reading tomorrow from Rus in Urbe at 9.30 pm together with New York poet Tammy Nuzzo Morgan (with a name like that, you can’t go wrong) and professor Brian Arkins of NUIG, as part of the Gerard Manley Hopkins…
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PUBLISHING DAY SEMINAR AT THE IRISH WRITERS’ CENTRE, JULY 7TH This one day seminar started with Ciara Doorley, editorial director of Hachette Ireland emphasising the importance of hook in a story and of getting others to read your work before…
Doghouse Poets Saturday 14 July @ 5pm Poetry Ireland in association with Siamsa Tíre Theatre and Doghouse Books presents Monica Corish, Gréagóir O’Dúill, Michael Farry, Anatoly Kudryavitsky, James Lawless and Barbara Smith. Admission €6/4 Siamsa Tíre Theatre, Town Park, Tralee…
A lovey evening in the Writers’ Centre on 27 June. Diligent Jack Harte launched the Novel Fair for unpublished authors for next year. It was a great success last year with 570 submissions and the twenty chosen are now in…
I’ll be interviewed tomorrow 28-06-12 at 12 noon by Helen O’Dwyer on Dublin South FM 93.9. I have to decide on three pieces of music from my scant collection and read from my new poetry collection Rus in Urbe. It…
My poetry collection, Rus in Urbe got a terrific launch from Catherine Murphy TD on the 22nd May with Noel King of Doghouse acting as MC in the Springfield Hotel Leixlip, Catherine emphasized the importance of poetry in our lives…
Amazon Killed The Book Reviewer Star Gregory Ferenstein Tuesday, May 15th, 2012 18 Comments 754px-Bookspine Authors no longer have to impress stodgy English majors to get their book a quality review: new research from the Harvard Business Review shows that…
James Lawless’s Poetry Launch of Rus in Urbe Tuesday, May 22 at 7:30/8pm at Springfield Hotel, Leixlip, Co. Kildare. Join
“In this wide-ranging book Lawless considers the work of many poets, including W. H. Auden, Allen Ginsberg and Mícheál Ó Siadhail, as he explores the relevance of poetry in ordinary and extraordinary people’s lives. It comes highly recommended.”
The Avenue by James Lawless Review by Roslyn Fuller Franky, a thirty or forty-something shy librarian, has spent his entire life on The Avenue, somewhere presumably in the less affluent part of Dublin. Having devoted his younger years to caring…