The nights may be drawing in - but the good news is that there's a dizzying array of cultural highlights to keep you warm and fuzzy as we head into the autumn...
1. Sprints - All That is Over
If their ferocious 2024 debut Letter to Self is anything to go by, Karla Chubb and her bandmates have a lot to live up to - but early signs suggest that this second album by one of Ireland’s best bands is all-thriller-no-filler, exploring themes of personal upheaval and societal ills (released September 26th)
2. BÁN
Directed by Claire Reilly, Carys D. Coburn’s reworking of The House of Bernarda Alba - Lorca’s final play, written in 1936 - draws parallels with Franco’s Spain and De Valera’s Ireland as a family of women gather to mourn their father under the watchful command of their mother (Abbey Theatre, Dublin from September 30th - November 8th)
3. John Banville - Venetian Vespers
One of the all-time greats publishes a new atmospheric mystery. English writer Evelyn Dolman and American heiress Laura Rensselaer embark on their honeymoon in Venice in 1899 - where secrets slowly reveal themselves against an eerie backdrop (Faber, published September 25th)
4. Emma Doran - Emmaculate
One of Ireland's brightest comedic talents brings her new show to venues nationwide - picking apart the "trials and tribulations of blended families, womanhood and relationships" in her own inimitable, hilariously dry-witted manner (on tour nationwide from September 25th)

4. The Walsh Sisters
Prepare for this adaptation of the beloved Marian Keyes' novels to be the TV hit of the autumn. The six-part series follows "chaotic, dysfunctional but deeply loveable family" of five Dublin sisters. Louisa Harland, Carrie Crowley, Aidan Quinn and Stefaine Preissner - who also co-wrote the script - star (RTÉ One, autumn TBC)
5. Macbeth
Now in their landmark 50th year, Druid continues to push boundaries. The Irish theatre stalwarts’ latest endeavour plays at the Dublin Theatre Festival, with the wonderful Marty Rea as the titular Scottish general (Gaiety Theatre, Dubln from September 25th - October 5th)
7. Re-Creation
The late Ian Bailey was never tried in an Irish court for the murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier - but writer/director Jim Sheridan’s film, with Aidan Gillen, Colm Meaney and Vicky Krieps, imagines how a trial jury may have deliberated the evidence (released October 3rd)
7. House of Guinness
You've drank the pints, you’ve split the G, you’ve maybe even toured the Storehouse - now it’s time to learn more about the family. Netflix’s big-budget drama delves into the characters behind the world’s most famous brewing family, set in 19th century Dublin and New York (from September 25th)

9. Trespasses
If you’ve read Louise Kennedy’s superb novel, you’ll know what a powerful, delicate, beautiful story Trespasses is - now it's been adapted for a TV mini-series by Ailbhe Keogan (Bad Sisters). Set in 1970s Belfast as the Troubles rage, Cushla (Lola Petticrew) is a young Catholic teacher who falls for Michael (Tom Cullen) an older, married Protestant solicitor. Gillian Anderson co-stars (Channel 4, autumn TBC)
10. Poor
Katriona O’Sullivan’s best-selling memoir has been adapted for the stage by comedian and playwright Sonya Kelly. Following her astonishing journey from a childhood ravaged by poverty and addiction to an inspirational apogee, it’s shaping up to be a harrowing but hopeful affair (Gate Theatre, Dublin from September 26th - November 2nd)