This Saturday’s Irish Times features an essay by Colm Tóibín on why the mothers of Wilde, Yeats and Joyce have always been elusive and mysterious; Niamh Donnelly on going to the Tyrone Guthrie Centre to write but ending up wrestling with the weight of failure and ambition; plus a host of reviews: Lucy McDiarmid on A History of Modern Irish Women’s Literature; Kevin Gildea on The Other Irish Tradition: An Anthology edited by Rob Doyle; Julie Parsons on Into That Darkness by Gitta Sereny; Dermot Bolger on Twelve Thousand Days: A Memoir of Love and Loss by Éilís Ní Dhuibhne; Stephen Phillips on Becoming by Michelle Obama; Connal Parr on Northern Heist by Richard O’Rawe; Ed O’Loughlin on A Radical History of the World by Neil Faulkner; Martina Evans on If Cats Disappeared From The World by Genki Kawamura, translated by Eric Selland; Anthony Roche on George Farquhar: A Migrant Life Reversed; Sarah Gilmartin on A Different Drummer by William Melvin Kelley; and John McAuliffe on new poetry colelctions by the late Matthew Sweeney, Michael O’Siadhail and Jane Robinson.
If you buy The Irish Times on Saturday from Eason’s, you can purchase Educated by Tara Westover for €4.99, a saving of €6.