This week's Sunday Miscellany was a special programme recorded on Culture Night at the Chapel Royal, Dublin Castle. New writing: Flotsam and Jetsam, by Andrea Martin Red Hugh and the ...
Sunday Miscellany The programme's new radio essays and occasional poems, interspersed with complementary music, capture our times, passions and curiosities. The content is selected mostly from open submission, with some commissions. Submissions are welcome from new and established writers alike. Reportage, appreciations, memory pieces, poetry, travel writing and personal accounts of events and happenings are the stuff of Sunday Miscellany. The programme is part of Sunday mornings since 1968. It is essential listening to many thousands across Ireland and more around the world. Coming up: Sunday Miscellany Live at the Red Line Book festival at the Civic Theatre in Tallaght at 6pm on ...
New essays and poetry: Ecstatic Dancing, by Rachel Fehily The Ghosts of Rue de Bièvre, by Conall Hamill Bottle of Smoke, a poem by Paddy Kehoe Queen of the May, ...
Sunday Miscellany The programme's new radio essays and occasional poems, interspersed with complementary music, capture our times, passions and curiosities. The content is selected mostly from open submission, with some commissions. Submissions are welcome from new and established writers alike. Reportage, appreciations, memory pieces, poetry, travel writing and personal accounts of events and happenings are the stuff of Sunday Miscellany. The programme is part of Sunday mornings since 1968. It is essential listening to many thousands across Ireland and more around the world.
New short essays: Something Sings, a poem by Denise Nagle The Angel of Liberation, by Conall Hamill Don't DIY, by Mary O'Malley The Winter of Love, a poem by James ...
Sunday Miscellany Its new radio essays and occasional poetry followed by complementary music capture our times, passions and curiosities. The contributor led content is selected from open submission and commissioned writing presented by new voices and established names. Reportage, appreciations, memory pieces, poetry, travel writing and personal accounts of events and happenings are the stuff of Sunday Miscellany. The programme is part of Sunday mornings since 1968. It is essential listening to thousands across Ireland and the world.