The Boy From the Woods by Harlan Coben is this week’s Irish Times Eason offer

A preview of Saturday’s pages and a roundup of the latest literary news


The Boy From the Woods by Harlan Coben is this week’s Irish Times Eason offer. You can buy a copy of the bestselling thriller writer’s latest work for €4.99, a saving of €7, when you purchase the weekend edition of The Irish Times in any branch.

In The Irish Times this Saturday, Michael Harding discusses his latest work, What’s Beautiful in the Sky: A Memoir of Endings, with Patrick Freyne. Reviews include Diarmaid Ferriter on Here’s the Story by Mary McAleese; Rabeea Saleem on The Nine Lives of Pakistan: Dispatches from a Divided Nation by Declan Walsh; Helen Cullen on Just Like You by Nick Hornby; Clement Knox on Wolfram Eilenberger’s Time of the Magicians; Kerri Ni Dochartaigh on Suppose a Sentence by Brian Dillon; Sarah Gilmartin on Pizza Girl by Jean Kyoung Frazi; and Claire Hennessy on the best new YA fiction.

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An Post and Children’s Books Ireland have announced the young winners of their Re-ImagineNation Competition. Working with children’s book artists Fatti Burke, Jennifer Farley, Tarsila Krüse and Alan Nolan, this summer the Re-ImagineNation competition encouraged children aged 6-12 from all over Ireland to re-imagine themselves as a character in a favourite book, and enter the competition by creating an artwork of themselves in a scene. The work of the competition winners, Elias Lawlor and Harshika Kaur, can now be seen on post boxes at 95 Sandymount Road, Dublin 4 and Sandyford Hall Avenue, Dublin 18.

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In Literature Ireland’s latest Talking Translations podcast, Colum McCann reads three chapters from his Booker-prize longlisted novel, Apeirogon. The same chapters are read in Arabic by Sawsan Obeid.

You can listen to the Talking Translations podcasts and read the texts here or on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, and other podcast discovery platforms.

“We are delighted to present an excerpt of Colum Mc Cann’s novel Apeirogon read by the author in English and in Arabic by the Palestinian translator, Sawsan Obeid. At a time when writers cannot travel, Literature Ireland’s Talking Translations podcasts aim to bring the best of Irish writing to greater attention internationally. In this way new, deeper connections can be built between Irish writers and their translators and with key foreign publishers and festival directors. Talking Translations podcasts are also simply for anyone around the world who enjoys listening to good literature,” said Sinéad Mac Aodha, director of Literature Ireland.

Throughout autumn/winter 2020, the Talking Translations podcast will feature Irish short stories and excerpts from novels, read by the writers themselves, as well as in a new translation by a specially-commissioned translator.

Next up, Cathy Sweeney will read a short story from Modern Times, with a translation by Jerzy Kozlowski into Polish. Future episodes will feature a section of This Happy by Niamh Campbell, translated into Spanish; the opening pages of Leonard and Hungry Paul by Rónán Hessian, translated into Swedish; and Caoilinn Hughes reading from The Wild Laughter, accompanied by a Spanish translation.

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In tribute to Maeve Binchy and her support for Irish writers, Echoes festival is giving away five #ReadIrishWomen #EchoesOfMaeve gift packages this October. Each gift contains two books: one by Maeve, specially signed by her husband, writer Gordon Snell; and one by an Irish author and previous Echoes guest - Andrea Carter, Henrietta McKervey, Sheila O’Flanagan, Jo Spain and One City One Book author Christine Dwyer Hickey. The competition runs October 2nd-4th - visit echoes.ie for details. An interview ‘At Home with Gordon Snell’ goes live on echoes.ie on Sunday, October 4th. Featuring Ireland’s Hidden Stories, the festival returns to Dalkey Castle and Heritage Centre on October 1st-3rd, 2021.

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On Sunday, October 4th, at 5pm, Eason and the Dublin Book Festival will virtually host Graham Norton discussing his new novel Home Stretch with broadcaster Rick O' Shea. Ticketholders for this exclusive event will also receive a signed copy of the book. For more information click here.

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Catherine Nunes, director of Wicklow's Shaking Bog Festival, greets autumn with a podcast featuring poet Seán Hewitt, memoirist and farmer Selina Guinness, Trinidadian/Scottish poet Vahni Capildeo, historian and tree enthusiast Thomas Pakenham and artist Gráinne Cuffe in conversation with botanist Prof. Jane Stout. The podcast is produced in collaboration with Coillte Nature and the Mermaid Arts Centre.

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The ISLA (Irish, Spanish & Latin American) Festival is taking place online this yesr, from October 15th-17th, broadcasting on YouTube, promoting Irish, Spanish and Latin America literature and arts.

The events will be subtitled in Spanish and English and there will be talks and readings in Spanish, English and Irish.

Participants include Jan Carson and her Spanish translator Clara Ministral, Christine Dwyer Hickey, John Connolly who will speak in Spanish!), poets Catherine Ann Cullen, Aifric Mac Aodha and Marcus Mac Conghail, Hispanists Bill Richardson, Argentinian cartoonist Miguel Rep (who has created an animated story with Jorge Luis Borges, Miguel de Cervantes, Julio Cortázar and James Joyce), Chilean writer and journalist Matías Celedón, Colombian poet Andrea Cote, Cuban poet Nancy Morejón (who will read a poem from Michael D Higgins in Spanish translation), Mexican writer Cristina Rivera Garza, and the Spanish YA writer Begoña Oro, composer Iris Azquinezer, and actress Enriqueta Carballeira.

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Acclaimed Colombian writer Jorge Franco is participating in the Words Ireland Mentoring Programme 2020, supported by the Colombian embassy in Dulbin. Franco, as well as mentoring Irish writer Lucy Moore, will also give an online masterclass, aimed at previous and current mentees of the programme, on October 13th at 5pm. His latest novel, Shooting Down Heaven, was published in English in June by Europa Editions, translated by Andrea Rosenberg.