Chairing: Our Stories: A Conference Celebrating LGBTQ+ Books and Publishing

I’m chairing a panel at 1.30pm Saturday Nov 11th.

Our stories is the first in person & online conference of 3 conferences in UNESCO Cities of Literature starting in Dublin on Saturday 11 November as part of Dublin Book Festival. Inspired by Pop Up projects (a literary agency in the UK), the conference is aimed at young people  (16+)  who will hear from established writers and illustrators as well as publishers and agents on representing more Lgbtq+ voices in literature for younger age groups. Award winning authors, Meg Grehan, Adiba Jairgirdar, Jarlath Gregory and Helen Corcoran will be on hand to discuss their creative paths to getting published. Mentors and young participants from the Rainbow Library creative writing & art projects held in Northern Ireland and Cork in 2022 will have an opportunity to discuss their own experience of developing stories and illustrations for publication. Finally, Faerie Press CIC  based in Northern Ireland will also launch a new  community publishing enterprise  during the conference with the aim of publishing inclusive children’s books across the island of Ireland.

Participants will have more to look forward to from the conferences at Manchester UNESCO City of Literature on Saturday 18 November  and Nottingham UNESCO City of Literature on Saturday 25 November.

MC for the event is Sasha De Buyl.

Tune in on the day to watch the event live streamed over on the Dublin Book Festival YouTube Channel.

Writing History: Dublin Book Festival, Nov 11

Join us as we take a step back in time for an evening of conversation in the beautiful surrounds of the Reading Room in the National Library of Ireland. Writer and playwright Paul McVeigh will be in conversation with three contemporary writers bringing history to life with their most recent novels. Edith (The Lilliput Press) by Martina Devlin is a captivating and insightful novel based on the life of Edith Somerville, a writer struggling to keep her art and spirit alive in the turbulence of 1920s Ireland. The Other Guinness Girl (Hachette) by Emily Hourican is the latest in a fascinating and deeply researched series of books about the glamorous world of the women in the famous Guinness family; a story of love, friendship and ambition set in the turbulent years preceding WWII. A Quiet Tide (New Island) by Marianne Lee is a beautifully crafted fictionalised account of the life of Ellen Hutchins, Ireland’s first female botanist, illuminating her passion and determination in the face of the many obstacles she faced.

Martina Devlin

Martina Devlin has written 11 books and two plays and is an award-winning journalist. She has won a VS Pritchett Prize from the Royal Society of Literature and a Hennessy Literary Award. Martina presents the City of Books podcast for Dublin UNESCO City of Literature and is the first holder of a PhD in literary practice from Trinity College Dublin where she has taught Irish literature.

Emily Hourican

Emily Hourican is a journalist and author. She has written features for the Sunday Independent for fifteen years, as well as Image magazine, Condé Nast Traveler and Woman and Home. She was also editor of The Dubliner Magazine. Emily’s first book, a memoir titled How To (Really) Be A Mother was published in 2013. She is also the author of novels The Privileged, White Villa, The Outsider and The Blamed, as well as two bestselling novels about the Guinness sisters: The Glorious Guinness Girls and The Guinness Girls: A Hint of Scandal. She lives in Dublin with her family.

Marianne Lee

Marianne Lee grew up in Tullamore, Co. Offaly and now lives in Dublin with her husband and two cats. She has a degree in Visual Communications from the National College of Art and Design and an MPhil in Creative Writing from Trinity College Dublin. She works as a designer and copywriter. Her debut novel, A Quiet Tide, a fictionalised account of the life of Ellen Hutchins, Ireland’s first female botanist was shortlisted for the 2021 Kate O’Brien Award, featured on RTÉ Radio One Book on One in spring 2022. Marianne is currently adapting A Quiet Tide for the screen and working on her second novel. @ThisMarianneLee www.mariannelee.ie

Paul McVeigh

Paul’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 The Art of the Glimpse and Being Various, as well as, on BBC Radio 3, 4 & 5, and Sky Arts. His writing has been translated into seven languages.

Dublin Book Festival presents Queer Love with Emma Donaghue and Neil Hegarty

Join Dublin Book Festival for an evening of delving into Queer Love: An Anthlogy of Irish Fiction (Munster Literature). The anthology was conceived as an attempt to redress the lack of acknowledgement of LGBTQIA+ community and representation in Irish literary anthologies. At this online event, editor of the collection Paul McVeigh is joined by two of its contributors, Emma Donoghue and Neil Hegarty to discuss their contributions to the anthology, the importance of producing this anthology, and developing LGBTQIA+ presence and representation in the Irish literary community. 

Also available as a Podcast

FREE EVENT – BOOK HERE