Reading at The Outing Festival

I’ll be visiting The Outing Festival at the Inn at Dromoland, Co. Clare, Ireland.

I’ll be reading from The Good Son and talking to Kitty Murphy on Saturday 15th February.

“An LGBT+ Weekend like no other!” The Outing Festival is a fusion of music, comedy, ceilí bands, queer arts, and the best of Ireland’s and International performers, drag artists and DJs plus so much more for over 10 Years”

Read ‘Daddy Christmas’ In Print For First Time

Wow! The Irish Times has done an amazing job with ‘Daddy Christmas’ my Christmas Day short story commissioned by Michael Shannon for BBC Radio Ulster which aired nationally in BBC Radio 4. This is its first time in print thanks to Martin Doyle and Nadine O’Regan at The Irish Times and look at these beautiful illustrations/artworks by Anne O’Hara.

‘Daddy Christmas’ will appear in my collection of radio stories ‘I Hear You’ from Salt Publishing March 2025.

You can read the story here and you can see more about ‘I Hear You’ here.

The Winners of The Paul McVeigh Residency at The Harrison

I’m excited to share the winners of this year’s residency at the beautiful Harrison Hotel. You can read a the long list of writing help the winners receive over at The Harrison website and while you’re there check out the amazing, muti-award-winning Harrison Hotel where they will stay for a week with host Melanie Harrision. Now to the winners…

Tenaya Steed is a visual artist and emerging writer. Her artwork has been supported by BBC ArtsArts Council England, and The British Council. She is an alumni of The Stinging Fly 6-month fiction programme, and Granta’s Literary Short Fiction workshop. Her story, Heavenly Mutha, won The Michael McLaverty Short Story Award in 2024. Another story, Missing the Eclipse, was published in The Stinging Fly’s 2024 summer issue. She was selected for The Irish Writers Centre’s National Mentoring Programme 2024, paired with mentor Wendy Erskine. Tenaya lives in Dublin and teaches Illustration at the National College of Art and Design. She is currently working on her first book, Canada House, named after the since demolished council flats she started out in.

Leeor Ohayon is a writer from London, based in Norwich where he is working on his PhD in Creative and Critical Writing at the University of East Anglia. His work has featured in the London Magazinethe White ReviewApartamentoBrick Lane Bookshop New Short Stories 2021 & 2023Paper BrigadeRSL Review and Prospect Magazine.

And the Writing West Midlands is…

Jane Commane was born in Coventry and lives in Warwickshire. She is a tutor, mentor, writer of poetry, fiction and non-fiction, and director / editor at Nine Arches Press. Jane is alumni of Writing West Midlands’ Room 204 writer development scheme, and was awarded the Jerwood Compton Poetry Fellowship in 2017-18. Her first poetry collection Assembly Lines, was published by Bloodaxe Books in 2018. Her poems have been anthologised in The Best British Poems (Salt Publishing), Being Human (Bloodaxe Books) and featured in The Guardian, and on BBC Radio 2, 4 and 6 Music. Jane has written essays about writing and the nature of creativity for several publications and anthologies, and co-wrote, with Jo Bell, the handbook and creative guide How to be a Poet (Nine Arches Press). She is currently working on both non-fiction and fiction writing projects; a book on living the creative life, and a novel set in the West Midland edgelands at the turn of the twenty-first century. www.janecommane.com

Congratulations to all the winners.

The Good Son in Italian

Very exciting news!

Eight years after the publication of The Good Son by Salt Publishing my debut novel will be translated into Italian. The book will be published in Italy by Barta Edizioni.

My Grandmother was Italian and although I sadly never met her I have always felt a close affinity with the country. I lived there on three occasions and travelled up and down the country.

The Italian edition joins translations in French, German, Hungarian and Russian!

Now, here’s the really interesting part of the story.

Valentina Vigilucca, a PHD student, got in touch with me about translating some of The Good Son into Italian as her thesis. Valentina then approached the publisher on my behalf. Without her they wouldn;t have happened. Thank you Valentina!

The Good Son 3rd Editon
You can buy here

Winner of The Polari First Novel Prize

‘A triumph of storytelling. An absolute gem.’ Donal Ryan

Raw, funny and endlessly entertaining’. Jonathan Coe

Interviewing Martina Devlin

The Black Box

Wednesday 15 January, 1.00pm

Doors 12.30 | Unreserved seating 

£12:00 including lunch

Tickets

“Charlotte Brontë, who dazzled the world with some of literature’s most vital and richly-drawn characters, spent her brief but extraordinary life in search of love. She eventually found it with Arthur Bell, a reserved yet passionate Irishman. After marrying, the pair honeymooned in Ireland – a glimmer of happiness in a life shadowed by tragedy.

That moment of joy was destined to be short-lived however, as Brontë died just nine months into their marriage. Her genius, and the aura of mystery surrounding her, meant she’d been mythologised even within her own lifetime – a process which only intensified after her death.

Observed through the eyes of Mary Nicholls – who encountered Charlotte on that fateful journey to Ireland, and who went on to wed her widower Arthur –Charlotte is a story of three lives irrevocably intertwined. Bound by passion and obsession, friendship and loss, loyalty and deception – this a story of Brontë’s short but pivotal time in Ireland as never before told.

Martina Devlin’s enthralling new novel Charlotte weaves back and forth through Charlotte’s life, reflecting on the myths built around her by those who knew her, those who thought they knew her, and those who longed to know her. Above all, this is a story of fiction: who creates it, who lives it, who owns it.

Charlotte is elegant and sophisticated but also completely gripping. Martina Devlin brilliantly creates the world around this iconic writer, with characters who have the power to surprise and compel. I loved it.’ Emily Hourican

‘In Charlotte, the raw gold of Charlotte Brontë’s marriage to Arthur Nicholls has been wrought in a wonderful artefact; this is a beautiful novel full of mystery, intrigue and story.’ Carlo Gébler

‘A powerful and compelling novel that expertly imagines the lives and times of those closest to Brontë, and captivates the reader with its cleverness and eloquence.’ Mary Costello

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Martina Devlin has written novels, plays and short stories. She has won the Royal Society of Literature’s V.S. Pritchett Prize, a Hennessy Literary Award, and been shortlisted three times for the Irish Book Awards.

She writes a weekly current affairs column for the Irish Independent for which she has won a number of prizes, including National Newspapers of Ireland commentator of the year. She holds a PhD in literary practice from Trinity College Dublin.”

The Bray: Read by Roisin Gallagher Listen Now

“A rare date for Julie and her husband Frankie turns sour when a toddler in the restaurant is let roam free, uncontrolled. Their own children are being minded by auntie Terry. On the way into Belfast city centre earlier, Julie and Frankie had passed near The Bray, where when she was a child her father had been shot dead for no reason at all.”

You can listen to my latest short story ‘The Bray’ read by this year’s Bafta-nominee, Roisin Gallagher.

The story was commissioned by Cliodhna Ni Anluain as part of the ‘Spoken Word’ series for RTE Radio 1 which includes Anne Enright, Lisa McInerney and Donal Ryan.

You can listen here.

3 Nov, Broadcast of The Bray on RTÉ Radio 1

My story for RTE 1 series, Spoken Stories: The State of Us, has a broadcast date – Sunday 3rd November. ‘The Bray’ is voiced by Bafta-nominated Northern Irish actress, Roisin Gallagher. Roisin loved my play, Big Man, and I loved her in The Dry and The Lovers, so it was brilliant we could work together. Produced by the wonderful Cliodhna Ni Anluain.

“RTÉ Radio 1’s Spoken Stories trilogy of new stories, begins its concluding season on RTÉ Radio 1 on Sunday 6th October at 7.30pm.

Like its other two seasons, these stories will be accompanied by an extended podcast of each episode.

The 36 stories across Spoken Stories were commissioned by RTÉ from some of the most exciting and imaginative present day writers associated with Ireland and the short story.

Through their stories, the writers navigate the breadth of what it is to be alive in the world from the perspective of our own time.

The themes of the 3 series that make up Spoken Stories areIndependence, Creatures of the Earth and The State of Us.

The latest 12 writers to contribute are William Wall, Mia Gallagher, Carlo Gébler, Nuala O’Connor, Rebecca Miller, Adrian Duncan, Niamh Campbell, Melatu Uche-Okorie, Cauvery Madhaven, Elaine Feeney, Colm Ó Snodaigh and Paul McVeigh.

Among the actors voicing their stories are Barry Ward, Claire Dunne, Peter Coonan , Ciarán McMenamin, Gabriel Adewusi, Mark O’Regan, Marcus Lamb, and Roisin Gallagher.

The stories are in English and in Irish, as well as by writers whose first language is neither Irish nor English. They are voiced by a cast of actors and some of the contributing writers.

This RTÉ Radio 1 original concept is made with the support of Coimmisiún na Méan.

Spoken Stories, RTÉ Radio 1 from Sunday 6th October at 7.30pm – listen to more from Spoken Stories here.

Read more on RTE here.

Interviewing Donal Ryan

Heart, Be At Peace: Donal Ryan in conversation with Paul McVeigh

Donal Ryan has rapidly become one of Irelands most celebrated authors. Join Donal as he talks about his new book, Heart, Be at Peace, and his career, with author Paul McVeigh.

Donal Ryan, from Nenagh, Co. Tipperary, is the author of six number one-bestselling novels and a short story collection. He has won several awards for his fiction, including the European Union Prize for Literature, the Guardian First Book Award and four Irish Book Awards, and has been shortlisted for several more, including the Costa Book Award and the Dublin International Literary Award. He was nominated for the Booker Prize in 2013 for his debut novel, The Spinning Heart, and again in 2018, for his fourth novel, From A Low and Quiet Sea. In 2016 his debut novel, The Spinning Heart, was voted Irish Book of the Decade. In 2021 he became the first Irish writer to be awarded the Jean Monnet Prize for European Literature. His work has been adapted for stage and screen and translated into over twenty languages. A law graduate and former civil servant, Donal has lectured in Creative Writing at the University of Limerick since 2014 and lives in Castletroy with his wife Anne Marie and their two children. His seventh novel, Heart, Be At Peace, will be published worldwide in August 2024.

Paul McVeigh’s debut novel, The Good Son, won The Polari First Novel Prize, The McCrea Literary Award and was shortlisted for many others including the Prix de Roman Cezam. His short stories have appeared in numerous anthologies, journals and newspapers, as well as, on BBC Radio 3, 4 & 5, and Sky Arts. He edited the Queer Love anthology and The 32: An Anthology of Irish Working Class Voices. His writing has been translated into seven languages. 

His collection of short stories written for BBC Radio, I Hear You, will be published by Salt Publishing in March 2025.

DateWednesday October 16th
VenueRathfarnham Castle
Admission€10 / €8
Time7pm

Book here.

I Hear You – Out march 2025

“We are delighted to announce Paul McVeigh’s debut short story collection, I Hear You, will be published in March 2025.

This collection of Belfast stories, each written for BBC Radio 4, includes the ten-part sequence: ‘The Circus’, set around Cliftonville Circus, where five roads meet in the north of the city.

The Circus is five minutes from the nationalist Troubles flashpoint of Ardoyne, where Paul grew up. It’s close to Holy Cross Girls’ School, where protests targeting primary school children drew international attention. The Circus is situated in the poorest part of the Belfast – it is also the most divided. Each road leads to a different area – a different class – a different religion. The Circus explores where old Belfast clashes with the new around acceptance, change, class and diversity. But this is 2024 and a fresh energy exists.

Other stories include ‘Tickles’, a story about a man visiting his mother in a dementia ward where he finds he is the one who had forgotten important things; ‘Cuckoo’, about a man’s collapse and surgery – where he feels something more sinister has happened to him; and ‘Daddy Christmas’, where a gay man writes a letter to the son he never had.

Paul McVeigh said: “I’ve been working with BBC Radio 4 for the last ten years and it’s been a wonderful experience. I’ve learned so much about telling stories written to be heard. It’s also great to be back working with Salt again.”

Christopher Hamilton-Emery said: “We’re thrilled to be working with Paul again, this time on a stunning collection of radio-performed stories. With its humour, pathos and personal tragedies, Paul manages to find the emotional heart of each immersive drama, and puts us in the centre of modern Belfast with all of its contemporary complexity and painful legacies.”