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At what stage in a career is it prudent to publish a retrospective of your work? The poet from Newtownards let others decide
The Belfast-based poet and crime writer ventures away from Lagan Press to dip his toe into self-publishing
Valerie Nicholson of Libraries NI encourages 'lapsed, reluctant or struggling' readers to pick up a book – or six
The Bangor-based model turned author enlisted the help of painter Neil Shawcross for first e-book release
The book sharing programme – initially started as a waste reduction scheme – has expanded to venues across the city
Musician and writer Reggie Chamberlain-King has fun with intellectuals at the Ulster Hall
Author Matt McGuire might have moved to Australia, but his debut novel is rooted in his home town of Belfast
Author Daniel Jewesbury's Talking Heads 'walking narrative' is part of the 'Poets and Players, Dockers and Dreamers' festival
The author of The Light of Amsterdam says he'll never write anything on the Troubles again
Receiving the Major Individual Artist Award from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland has allowed the poet time to dream
The actor, director and now memoirist on his long career, his family and the one role he'd still love to play
An award from the Arts Council let the Belfast author write her new book in six months, not six years
Authors Martin Amis and David Grossman are coming to the Lyric Theatre to talk about their very different novels
Carolyn Jess-Cooke's books are full of angels and demons, but the writer rejects being pigeon-holed as 'strictly' a fantasy author
The former Blackstaff Press managing director on keeping an open mind and looking for the unexpected
The Derry~Londonderry author on her Young Adult debut, social networking and the benefits of a Donegal beach
Newry author talks about her debut novel, Venice and 'a mad robin who gets going around midnight'
Debut novelist takes on the tough topics of race, murder and class in The Fall
The children's author on button boxes, reading in public and living on an island 'off the edge of Donegal'
Belfast author Gerard Brennan sells two books to Blasted Heath e-publisher. Listen to a reading here
The Belfast-based publisher celebrates their 40th anniversary by joining the ebook revolution
David Brashaw on the process of turning Terry Pratchett's Guards! Guards! into a game
Children's author had prior experience with ghosts. Listen to a reading from chapter one below
Authors prepare for a week of words in Bangor
A new book from Gower Publishing uncovers the seedy underbelly of art bullies
The poet talks about the dearth of paper publishing, his unseemly interests and masochistic radio habits
Listen to two poems from Fyfe's new collection, Understudies, and discover how America has shaped her work
Northern Irish author scoops two awards in the Bisto Children's Book of the Year Awards
Stephen Douds writes a history of the Belfast Blitz using the 'voices of ordinary people'
Listen to a podcast featuring Lewis expert Sandy Smith and discover the iconography of Narnia inspired by Belfast landmarks
Listen to a podcast featuring Lewis expert Sandy Smith and discover how Lewis’s Belfast homes influenced his writing career
Listen to a podcast featuring Lewis expert Sandy Smith and discover how Lewis’s early life in Belfast influenced the Narnia works
Listen to a reading by author Amanda Brobyn and find out why she doesn't need a psychic to tell the future is bright
Watch an online exhibition featuring photographs and testimonies from emigrants in the city, from Why Belfast?
Author and Director of Art Writing at Goldsmiths enjoys the art of book publishing, but remains wary of the e-reader revolution
Poet Moyra Donaldson's new collection takes inspiration from the freaks and geeks of the 18th century
Poet explores 'freakery' and loss in new collection
The campaigner against institutional abuse prepares for his Amnesty International lecture
Maeve Binchy's nephew claims that being a writer is a lot like being a chef
The crime writer turns his hand to theatre writing and releases a new novel. Watch an interview, featuring a reading from Dr Yes, below
Sheena Wilkinson writers Young Adult, but she doesn't do pink, soppy, girly or undead in her latest novel
Anthony Glavin remembers the author, his friend, and talks about this year's theme 'The Shortest Way Home'
E-published author Jamie Guiney says that e-books are the 'wave of the future'
Read with the Blackbird Bookclub and celebrate contemporary Northern Irish work at Queen's
'There is no I in poet,' says the scribe from County Down
A new website selling books from Northern Ireland online
The Linen Hall Library marks the 40th anniversary of Joan Lingard's The Twelfth Day of July with an exhibition of her work
Award-winning writer takes a gothic turn in Ravine, but don't call it horror
For Chris Agee artistic success meant Next to Nothing after the death of his daughter, but the habit of poetry supported him through his loss
Gothic playwright Jaki McCarrick turns a childhood memory of a brutal murder into an award-winning play
Zombie horror author Wayne Simmons and Susan Picken of QFT discuss their favourite genre ahead of The Life and Times of the Living Dead weekend at Queens Film Theatre
Author of The Rising on Tom Waits, The Great Gatsby and overcoming rejection
When Tim Brannigan was a year old he was adopted by his birth mother. In Where are you Really From? he talks about jail, growing up in Belfast and his mother's audacious plan to keep him
Does the webmaster of Crimescene NI have a dark side? Find out as he collaborates with some of Northern Ireland's biggest crime-writers in the anthology, Requiems for the Departed
The Theatre might be Accidental but writer Michael Shannon's success isn't
The Belfast author on schlocky horror, 'torture porn' and his new book on the Godfather of Gore film-maker Dario Argento
Ballymena-born fantasy author Paul Kearney's Spartan inspired military fantasy keeps marching on
A literary afternoon delight, if not quite what Glenn Patterson was expecting
The Portstewart playwright turns novelist, with a debut novel The Butterfly Cabinet. Click play for an exclusive reading.
'Ireland is full of greasy little bagmen, posing as consultants, who’ll get you a face-to-face with a minister for twenty grand... Politics here is crooked and criminal, and it’s why I write fiction'
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