Jack Harte was born in Killeenduff, Co Sligo, in 1944 and grew up in Lanesboro, Co Longford. His short story collections are Murphy in the Underworld (1986), Birds and Other Tails (1996), and From Under Gogol's Nose (2004). A CD of his stories and songs, Lament for the Birds, was released in 2004. Collections of his stories in translation have appeared in Russia, India and Bulgaria. He had a novella, Homage, published in 1992. His first novel, In the wake of the Bagger, commissioned under the Government's Per Cent for Art scheme, was published in 2006. The following year his second novel, Reflections in a Tar-Barrel, was published in Bulgarian translation before appearing in English in 2008. For many years Jack worked as Principal of Lucan Community College.
Louise Phillips returned to writing in 2006, after a 20 year gap. Her work has been published as part of many anthologies, including County Lines from New Island, and various literary journals. In 2009, she won the Jonathan Swift Award for her short story Last Kiss, and in 2011, she was a winner in the Irish Writers’ Centre Lonely Voice platform. Louise has also been short-listed for the Molly Keane Memorial Award, Bridport UK, and long-listed twice for the RTE Guide/Penguin Short Story Competition. In 2012, she was awarded an Arts Bursary for Literature from South Dublin County Council. Also that year, her debut novel Red Ribbons, a psychological crime thriller was published. It was subsequently shortlisted for ‘Best Irish Crime Novel of the Year 2012’, in the Irish Book Awards. In 2013, her second novel, The Doll’s House will be published by Hachette Books Ireland.
Mia Gallagher is a fiction writer, playwright and performer based in Dublin. Her short fiction has been published in the UK, US and Ireland; it won the START Chapbook Short Fiction award (2005) and was shortlisted for the Fish, Hennessy and William Trevor/Elizabeth Bowen Awards. Her debut novel HellFire (Penguin Ireland, 2006) was critically acclaimed and received the Irish Tatler Literature Award, and an extract from her second novel Beautiful Pictures of the Lost Homeland appears in the spring 2012 issue of Literary Imagination (Oxford University Press). Between 2009-2010, Mia was Writer-in-Residence with IADT/dlr arts office. In 2010 four of her translations appeared in The Irish Catullus (ed. Ronan Sheehan). In 2011, her sound installation Electric Blanket (a collaboration with director Ciaran Taylor and sound artist Jack Cawley) premiered at the Electric Picnic and her short play Fishy was produced by Waterford Youth Drama. She also played the role of activist and writer Rosamund Jacob in Des Bell's docudrama The Enigma of Frank Ryan. Most recently, the Mermaid Theatre in Bray hosted rehearsed readings of Mia's new play Salmon, and three adaptations from the Grand Guignol Theatre of Horror, which she worked on with Ciaran Taylor. She is currently developing a new novel, with the support of an Arts Council bursary. Mia has also run writing and drama workshops for over 13 years with many different groups, from secondary school students to people in treatment centres.
Ferdia Lennon is from Dublin. He recently returned from Paris, where he co-wrote the comedy sketch show Fifth Wall which played at the Petit Théâtre du Bonheur, Montmartre. His short fiction has appeared in journals such as Southword, The Galway Ropes Anthology and Wordlegs 30 under 30. In 2012 he was shortlisted for the Sean O' Faolain Short Story Competition. You can read his story here. |