Patrick Cotter Joins Paul McVeigh Residency

We’re delighted that Patrick Cotter has joined the residency. The three winners will go to Cork to meet with Patrick where they can ask him about the industry. Patrick is Director of Munster Literature Centre and Cork International Short Story Festival and has invaluable advice about approaching festivals and what’s expected of you when you’re there.

Patrick Cotter has published many books of poetry, most recently Quality Control at the Miracle Factory (Dedalus, 2025). He is a recipient of the Keats-Shelly Poetry Prize and has been short-listed for many others. His poems have been translated into twenty languages. His poems have been published in the Financial Times, London Review of Books, Poetry and over twenty anthologies. He lives in Cork.

For more info on the Paul McVeigh West Cork Residency click here.

ARTS COUNCIL NI AWARDEE

What a relief! I’m very lucky to have received an Arts Council NI grant to fund my writing.

I applied through the Arts Council of Northern Ireland’s Project Funding for Individuals Programme for time to write a new collection of stories.

I’m very grateful for the support for my writing but as most writers struggle with their finances it makes such a huge difference to the financial stress.

Thanks again ACNI and National Lottery.

Patrick Holloway & Hilary White Join The Residency

Both winners of the inaugural Paul McVeigh Residency are back this year.

Patrick Holloway will talk to the winners about life after the residency and how to prepare for your first book entering the world. Hilary White will help judge who gets the three places this year. Here’s more about them.

Patrick Holloway is a  writer of fiction and poetry, and won The Bath Short Story Prize, The Allingham Fiction Contest, The Flash 500 Prize, The Molly Keane Creative Writing Prize, among others. His debut novel, The Language of Remembering, was published in 2025 and was described as The Irish Times as ‘an utterly readable book of real depth,’ the Irish Independent as ‘modern Irish writing at its finest’, and The Irish examiner as a ‘powerful, original family story from a wonderfully talented writer.’ It was listed in RTE’s top 10 books of 2025. His work appears in The Stinging Fly, The Moth, The London Magazine, Carve, Southword, among others. 

Hilary White is a writer and conservationist from Dublin. His work has appeared in The Dublin ReviewWinter PapersTolkaArchaeology IrelandSunday and Irish Independents, and the Irish Times. He is currently completing City of Hawks, a memoir about Dublin and its raptors. He was chosen for the inaugural Paul McVeigh Residency 2023, and long-listed for the 2024 Nature Chronicles Prize. Hilary is a recipient of the Literature Bursary and Agility awards from the Arts Council of Ireland. 


You can apply here.

Yvonne Battle-Felton joins Paul McVeigh West Cork Residency

Yvonne Battle-Felton joins the Paul McVeigh West Cork Residency where she will talk to the three winners in advance of their stay to help them get the best from the residency.

Battle-Felton is an award-winning author, academic, editor, podcaster, host, creative producer, and writer. Her debut, Remembered (Dialogue Books, Blackstone Publishing) was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction (2019) and shortlisted for the Jhalak Prize (2020). Yvonne has six titles in Penguin Random House’s The Ladybird series. Yvonne is former Senior Commissioning Editor at Hachette’s John Murray Press and is the Academic Director of Creative Writing at Cambridge University. Winner of The Shirley Jackson Award (novel), Curdle Creek (2024 Dialogue Books, Henry Holt), a gothic horror inspired by Shirley Jackson’s The Lottery, is her second novel. Yvonne is a finalist in the Hurston Wright Foundation Zora Award for Fiction and is lover of stories in all of their forms.

Photo Credit: Marat Battle

APPLY HERE.

Robert Olen Butler Joins Paul McVeigh Residency

The final mentor for the Paul McVeigh West Cork Residency is the incredible Robert Olen Butler.

Robert Olen Butler has published sixteen novels and six volumes of short fiction including A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain, which won the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. Butler has also published a volume of his lectures on the creative process, From Where You Dream. In 2013 he became the seventeenth recipient of the F. Scott Fitzgerald Award for Outstanding Achievement in American Literature. He also won the Richard and Hinda Rosenthal Foundation Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award. He has twice won a National Magazine Award in Fiction and has received two Pushcart Prizes. He has also received both a Guggenheim Fellowship in fiction and a National Endowment for the Arts grant. His stories have appeared widely in such publications as The New YorkerEsquireHarper’sThe Atlantic MonthlyGQZoetropeThe Paris ReviewGranta, The Hudson ReviewThe Virginia Quarterly ReviewPloughshares, and The Sewanee Review. His works have been translated into twenty-one languages.

More information on the residency is found here and will launch Friday October 31st.

Éilís Ní Dhuibhne Joins Paul McVeigh Residency

Éilís Ní Dhuibhne is currently the Laureate for Irish Fiction. She has worked in the Department of Irish Folklore in UCD, and for many years as a curator in the National Library of Ireland. Also a teacher of Creative Writing, she has been Writer Fellow at Trinity College Dublin and Writer Fellow at UCD. She is a member of Aosdána since 2004, an ambassador for the Irish Writers’ Centre, and President of the Folklore of Ireland Society (An Cumann le Béaloideas Éireann). Ní Dhuibhne was the Burns Visiting Scholar at Boston College.

Author of more than thirty books, she has published seven collections of short stories. Her most recent books are Twelve Thousand Days: A Memoir (shortlisted for the Michel Déon Award 2020) and Little Red and Other Stories (Blackstaff 2020), Selected Stories (Blackstaff 2023), Fáínne Geal and Lae (Clo Iar Chonnacht 2023), Look! It’s a Woman Writer! (Arlen House, 2021), and Well! You Don’t Look It! Essays by Irish women writers on Ageing (Salmon 2024).

She has been the recipient of many literary awards, most recently the Pen Award for an Outstanding Contribution to Irish Literature, and a Hennessy Hall of Fame Award, many Oireachtas Awards for her writing in Irish, and the Stuart Parker Award for Drama. Her novel, The Dancers Dancing, was shortlisted for the Orange Prize in 2000. In addition to her fiction and drama, she has written many scholarly articles on folklore and literary topics, and is a regular book reviewer for The Irish Times.

What lucky winners.

More information on the residency is coming soon with a little more found here.