WriteStuff

HeadStuff

WriteStuff is a podcast in which Chris Fitzgerald interviews prominent writers about all things writing. People interested in reading and writing will hear how successful writers go about their craft from the seed of an idea to publication. Novelists, journalists, poets, academics and lyricists will be interviewed to gain insights into what makes quality writing.

  • 21 minutes 55 seconds
    26: Ian Maleney
    As well as being a gifted writer, Ian Maleney is a very thoughtful and articulate speaker, which comes across in this conversation. Ian talks about a lot of the topics that he has that he expressed in his collection of essays, Minor Monuments, as well as many of the challenges that face a young artist in Ireland today. 
    2 August 2019, 10:37 am
  • 18 minutes 20 seconds
    25: Hugo Hamilton
    In Hugo Hamilton’s fictional memoir, Dublin Palms, he explores themes of home and displacement and describes the difficulty of growing up in a multi-lingual home. Here he discusses those themes and describes the process of writing fictional memoir, which he says is like creating a ‘blurry self-portrait’. He also reads from Dublin Palms and talks about how he writes now, after so many years of experience and success. 
    4 July 2019, 3:24 pm
  • 28 minutes 15 seconds
    24: Anne Griffin
    Anne Griffin’s debut novel, 'When All is Said' is rightly getting praise from authors, reviewers and the public for its depiction of Maurice Hannigan, a fictional character that you come to deeply know and relate to through reading the novel. Here, Anne speaks about how she got published, how she dealt with rejection and how she created such an affecting character. 
    18 June 2019, 2:05 pm
  • 17 minutes 35 seconds
    23: Niall MacMonagle
    ‘I think what poetry needs most of all is music.’
    This episode of WriteStuff features Niall MacMonagle, who is incredibly knowledgeable and passionate about poetry. He is a teacher and collector of poetry, being responsible for some much loved anthologies, including the Lifelines series and Windharp. He has also created texts which present poetry to students like Poetry Now. Here he talks about the value of poetry to everyone and quotes some of his most loved poems as he explains the beauty of poetry in all its forms. 
    4 June 2019, 11:50 am
  • 41 minutes 11 seconds
    22: Helen Cullen
    Helen Cullen offers insights into how she wrote her first novel, The Lost Letters of William Woolf. After reading from the opening of the novel, Helen describes how she came to the premise of the novel and how she developed the characters. She also offers an honest portrayal of the anxiety felt at the different stages of the publication process.
    2 May 2019, 10:48 am
  • 16 minutes 3 seconds
    21: Kerrie O'Brien
    In 'Illuminate', Kerrie O’Brien has created a collection of poems that deals with a range of themes, yet is coherent in its style and beauty. Here she talks about ‘Illuminate’ and the work that went into creating it as well as reading two of the most loved poems from that collection. She also gives her take on the current literary scene as someone who has worked in many areas of it and the relationship between her poetry and her visual art.
    28 January 2019, 11:22 am
  • 13 minutes 46 seconds
    20: Sorcha Fox
    ‘I always think of the voices that don’t get amplified in society.’  Sorcha Fox is a multitalented performer, actor, writer, director and poet who has written a poetic sequence called Remember that invites her audience to remember their national past, which can invoke pride or often shame. Her words and performances are powerful evocations of the darker elements of Ireland’s past and by highlighting these elements force her audience to reflect on current problems.
    10 January 2019, 3:31 pm
  • 36 minutes 2 seconds
    19: Martin Dyar
     ‘Poetry is about addressing the limits of our perceptions.’ Martin Dyar is a poet who manages to be both a respectful scholar of the traditions of poetry and a voice that is contemporary and mindful of the future of the form. In this interview, Martin discusses the role of the poet and offers many insights into a life dedicated to the study and creation of poetry as well as reading three of his compositions.
    18 December 2018, 12:49 pm
  • 32 minutes 37 seconds
    18: Danny Denton
    In the Earlie King and the Kid in Yellow, Danny Denton has written a novel that really fits into the archive of Irish fictional writing while standing out as something unique in its delivery of an imaginative context of an alternative Ireland, with a plot that is exposed through various storytelling devices and characters that are both likable and very familiar. Danny talks here about rejection, persistence, the fun and the hard work of writing and gives some great insights into the life of a really dedicated writer that get the feeling that he has just begun to make his impact.
    29 November 2018, 12:38 pm
  • 16 minutes 19 seconds
    17: Dr. Martina Carroll on Writing in Positive Psychology
    In this episode, Dr. Martina Carroll talks about the connection between writing and positive psychology. As a teacher, psychologist and writer, Martina has a lot to say about how writing can play a role in developing positive psychology.
    13 November 2018, 11:51 am
  • 28 minutes 18 seconds
    16: Rob Doyle
    ‘When I sit down to write, I’m pursuing an ideal of total freedom.’ Rob Doyle talks here about his novel 'Here Are the Young Men', his story collection 'This is the Ritual', his forthcoming novel and an anthology of experimental Irish writing that he edited called 'The Other Irish Tradition'. He also talks about his introversion, a soon to be released movie of his novel and his passion for Nick Cave.
    30 October 2018, 2:05 pm
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