Showing posts with label Penguin Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penguin Ireland. Show all posts

Her Kind UK Edition

The Bookclub Edition! 

 Her Kind tells the story of Ireland's first witchcraft trial - the 1324 Sorcery Trial of Dame Alice Kyteler. It was a landmark case in the history of witchcraft trials, the first case of a woman accused of having a demon lover (an incubus) and leading a sect of sorceresses. The case was notorious at the time. The judges of the EU Prize for literature, called Her Kind 'as searing a critique of our own times as is Arthur Millar's The Crucible.'


SOME REVIEWS... 

A masterpiece… Boyce delicately unfolds this atmospheric, magical thriller with pace and juice.  Sunday Independent.

Gripping ... a complicated story of ambition, love and what it means to belong ... evocative and atmospheric.' Irish Times

'Beautifully written and transports us to the 14th century, though its themes loudly resonate today.' RTE.ie

'A beautifully absorbing novel, illuminating the remarkable story of a woman whose life has since been subsumed into folklore. Highly recommended.' Hot Press


                     Her Kind is available from bookshops 


                                                        in the UK....

☝ W.H. Smith ...   here 

☝ Waterstones ...  here

☝ Foyles ...          here

☝ Amazon uk ...  here

                                                          and Ireland...


Easons ... here

Dubray ... here

The Gutter Bookshop ...  here

The Book Centre ... here

Kennys Bookshop ... here


                                                          and also... 

ABE books ... here

Book Depository ... here

Amazon ... here








Witching Season...


Her Kind



Winter Book Tour 2019

20th  Sept        CULTURE NIGHT
Interview  with  Liz Walsh in Kilkenny Libary

29th Sept          FICTION AT THE FRIARY
Run by Danielle Mc Laughlin & Madeleine D'Arcy. The final Sunday of every month in Cork- fun, fiction, jelly beans,  hula hoops, open mic & free book raffle. 
info: here
                             
6th Oct              DROMINEER/NENAGH 
The Witch within the Walls - Nenagh Castle - 4pm
Niamh  will be chatting to Sarah Moore Fitzgerald. Music from singer Dylan Rooney, and cellist Gráinne Higgins
 Tickets = here

Dylan Rooney, Sarah Moore Fitzgerald, Niamh Boyce












15th Oct            EMBASSY BOOK CLUB
Special Reading with the Embassy Book Club
Embassy of  Ireland, Brussels
tickets : here










16th Oct            SNUG HARBOUR
Karl Dehmelt & Niamh Boyce on stage in Brussels
Snug Harbor is created by Sofie Verraest, hosted by Muntpunt Library, the Muntpunt Grand Cafe, Mont Saint  Eugene, the Brussels Writers' Cirlce & Waterstones
details : here
Niamh Boyce, Karl Dehmelt
.













19th Oct               KILDARE READERS FESTIVAL
Something Wicked This Way Comes
Panel in The Riverbank, Newbridge, with Niamh Boyce, Stacey Halls, & Martina Devlin
Whether it’s horror fiction or historical non-fiction, Witches and Wiccan culture have provided rich material for authors throughout the years.During the season of Samhain, we will be discussing witches within the canon of literature. 
Tickets: Here









26th Oct          IMAGINE LITERARY FESTIVAL
From Fact to Fiction Writing Workshop in Waterford
Details: here



9th Nov             LEAVES FESTIVAL
Conversation, music and readings in Portlaoise  - John Sheahan & Niamh Boyce with Dermot Bolger.
Booking: here

14th Nov           Dublin Book Festival: National Library of Ireland
Writing Ireland's History 
Niamh Boyce, Patricia O'Reilly, Eibhear Walshe & Nessa O' Mahoney
Booking: here
















23rd Nov         Workshop: Freshford, Kilkenny
details on  the way... !



Novel Fair 



I'm one of the Irish Writer Centre's Novel Fair judges this year. I would really encourage anyone interested to enter. I wasn't going to send my novel  in 2012  but a writer friend pushed   encouraged me - and I posted it at the last minute. My novel The Herbalist became one of the  winners that year, and was published by Penguin Ireland the following Summer. So go for it! There's not much to lose, and shortlisted writers get critical feedback...  more info Here






Her Kind


Published by Penguin Random House

The release date for my novel based on the Kilkenny Witchcraft trials is nearing, its the 4th April! 

The book is inspired by events in Kilkenny in 1324, by a trial that arose after moneylender Dame Alice Kytler was accused of witchcraft by Bishop Ledrede. She was a very wealthy business woman with debtors, and relations, in high places - records show she had lent King Edward (half of Kilkennie was governed by the crown in those days) a princely five hundred pounds. There's no record of his honoring that payment... but more of all that later. 

The case is historically significant for a number of reasons, it predates the Witch hunts of the 16th Century by two hundred years, yet the accusations made against Alice and her household, are almost identical to those that were to follow. It marks a significant moment in witch trial history, one where sorcery was elevated from being a petty to a much more serious, heretical crime - a change that had significant long term consequences... But, the heart of my book are the people involved in the case, Richard Ledrede, Dame Alice Kytler and her maid Petronelle ... 

Her Kind is available to pre-order Here

***

The novel also got a mention in this piece...


                                                                           
                                                                               ***

For anyone interested in hearing more in the meantime - I wrote an article about the background to the trial for Womankind's Gothic edition....

Issue #5: Gothic

Bossy Post




The deadline for the Irish Writers Centre Novel Fair is October 16th. 

Writers are often overly critical of their own work and keep putting stuff like this off, at least until every sentence is a work of art. If you recognise yourself in that description, just take the plunge and submitt your work! I was pushed to enter in 2012 and it led to meeting the publisher of my debut novel. So, in the spirit of paying that pushiness forward...

Go on, go on ! All they need is a synopsis and 10,000 words! You have nothing to lose. Being selected for the fair means by passing the slush pile and increasing your chances of publication, how bad is that?

I posted an interview with Carrie from the Irish Writers Centre last year-  it can be read  HERE 

And another thing...

NUI Kilkenny Campus (St Kieran's College, Kilkenny)are having an open evening this Thursday 29th from 5.30- 8pm - they run the wonderful Creative Writing For Publication Course, which does exactly what it says on the tin. Its perfect for anyone who wants to take their writing further, with accessible fees and a one weekend-a- month schedule.

Ok. End of broadcast :)

Novel Fair Launch





Novel Fair Launch & Information Night
7pm- Irish Writers Centre - 25th July 213
All Welcome

Are you thinking of entering The Irish Writers Centre's Novel Fair? If so, you might be interested in coming along to this event...

'The Irish Writers' Centre is launching the 3rd annual Irish Writers' Centre Novel Fair Competition. The evening will include talks by Patricia Deevy from Penguin Ireland and two past participants in the Novel Fair, Niamh Boyce author of The Herbalist and Janet Cameron author of Cinnamon Toast and the End of the World.'

To read about my experience of the novel fair, click here

Coming in June

It's getting close to publication date ( June 6th), which is both exciting & terrifying. I'm trying to immerse myself in this new book I'm writing to keep from having daily panic attacks - its deadline is my lifeline :)

The Next Big Thing

Jean Harlow
 I was tagged to join in The Next Big Thing, by the fabulous  Nuala Ni Chonchuir over at  Women Rule Writer.

The Next Big Thing consists of a series of questions about the writter/bloggers next project. I had considered writing about a novel I've just begun but its at far too early a stage to be scutinised! So here goes...


 What is the working title of your book?

The first draft was called, melodramatically, The Devil Wore White. (Don't laugh.) The following drafts were worked on as The Herbalist, which stuck.

Where did the idea come from for the book?
It goes back a long way. When I was eighteen I worked for a summer indexing newspaper articles from the late 1930s and early 1940s. One day I came across a report that stuck in my mind - the article in question, which was only three sentences or so long, referred to an Indian Herbalist who had been arrested for offences against girls. I made a note of it and got on with my life.Twenty years later, I began to write short stories. An Indian herbalist walked into one of the first, held a glass bottle up to the light and smiled. 

I wrote many other stories, none to do with him, but he kept appearing. Then other voices began to speak and they were all talking about the same person, the herbalist -some called him a scoundrel, some a saviour. Each was a woman and each whispered a different version of a similar tale. So I gave in and decided to write it all down.

Though inspired by a real person in a real article, I wanted to write fiction so did no research before I began the first draft. I set it in 1939 and just started writing. I wrote in the mornings, giving no thought to plot, structure, beginnings or endings. I wrote fast though I didn't know it at the time, as I had nothing to compare my output with. I never showed the work to anyone. I averaged 1,000 words a day for the first week and then upped it to 2,000 words a day - I stopped when I felt done - at around 80, 000 words.  That was 2009 - I printed it out, put it in a shoe box and labelled it The Devil Wore White. In 6 weeks I was going to go back to work on it. That was the plan. Unfortunately or fortunately, I got caught up in writing another novel called Ghost Estate. That shoebox stayed shut for two years.

Then I heard about The Irish Writers Centres Novel Fair. I decided to enter The Herbalist. Reading it after so long was a strange experience. I had no recollection of some of the scenes or even some of the twists and turns. There was lots of work to be done. But I made the Novel Fair deadline and became a finalist and got to go to the fair. Ger Nichols was the first person I met that morning, and one of the nicest. She became my agent a week later.

What genre does your book fall under?
A damn good read.

Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?
John Malkovich
Perhaps John Malkovich for the Herbalist. And I would love Brenda Fricker for the part of Aggie, a prostitute who lives on the river. As for Emily, Carmel and Sarah it would be great if talented unknowns got their hands on such strong female roles. If we could time travel I'd hire Jean Harlow to play the beautiful Rose.
Brenda Fricker


What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?

A man appears one day in a market square, sets himself up as a herbalist and changes the lives of four women for ever.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?

June, July and August 2009 as far as I can recall.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

I avoided anything that seemed similar when I wrote it and since. I couldn't say.

Who or what inspired you to write this book?
The characters wouldn't leave me alone.

What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?

Good people doing bad things and bad people having a rare old time?

When and how will it be published?
It will be published by Penguin Ireland in  June 2013. It will be launched in my home town of Athy, and all are welcome:)

I'd like to tag Alison Wells and Helena Duggan for next wednesdays, Next Big Thing!


Launch Of This Years Novel Fair Competition

Gabriele Munter
The Girl With the Red Ribbon
National Gallery Of Ireland

All are welcome to the second Irish Writers Centre Novel Fair Competition which will be launched at 7.30, on Wednesday June 27th: its a great opportunity for anyone who plans to enter the competition as it will involve a question and answer session with the Novel fair organisers.

From The Irish Writers Centre Site...

"The Novel Fair was a new initiative by the Irish Writers’ Centre launched in 2011. It aims to introduce up-and-coming writers to top publishers and literary agents, giving novelists the opportunity to bypass the slush pile, pitch their ideas and place their synopsis and sample chapters directly into the hands of publishers and agents.

Due to the success of the Fair we have decided to run it again in 2013, with an additional prize of a place on a seminar on 'How to Pitch Your Novel' to help the novelists perfect their presentations and material for the day.

The deadline for the competition this year is October 17th and the Novel Fair itself will take place on February 16th, 2013.

This year a judging panel will be asked to select a shortlist of ten successful entries, presented to them anonymously. There is no limitation on style, genre, or target market, the only requirement being that the writer has not published a novel before. Publishers and agents will be invited to come along on the day to the Irish Writers’ Centre and meet the ten selected writers in person. Each writer in attendance will have a stand at the Fair with copies of the synopsis of their novel, the finished novel itself and biographical material."

Good News!


I'm delighted to annnounce that Penguin Ireland have bought my novel The Herbalist, and it will be published in 2013!

From the press release:

"The Herbalist is a vivid and atmospheric story set in a midlands town over a summer in late 1930s. An Indian man appears in the market square, sets up a stall and declares himself a herbalist. The people of the town flock to the exotic visitor, who seems to have a cure for everything that ails them. But the visitor also helps get rid of some of the town’s more sordid secrets and as the summer progresses life becomes complicated and dangerous for the herbalist and his devotees. A rich multi-layered story of life in 1930s Ireland told through the eyes of four women, each of whose lives is changed irrevocably by the herbalist."

Patricia Deevy, Editorial Director, Penguin Ireland said, ‘I’m absolutely thrilled to have bought Niamh’s dazzling novel. Niamh vividly conjures both the warmth and the darkness of life in a provincial Irish town during those years before the Emergency. In particular, she handles the now familiar shadow side of Irish life – the rigid social stratification, the fear of sex, the double standards – in a wholly fresh and confident way. Her characters are fascinating women and she has written a thought-provoking, moving and viscerally engaging novel that marks her out as a remarkable and original new talent.’

... and I'll be reading from The Herbalist at the Novel Fair 2013 Launch on June 27th at the Irish Writer's Centre !


From Irish Publishing News:
Penguin Ireland Signs Hennessy XO Winner

From Carry On Writing @ Writing.ie
Journalist & Author Hazel Gaynors Blog

From Book2Book:
 Penguin Ireland Is Delighted To Announce The Acquisition Of The Herbalist By Hennessy Award Winning Author Niamh Boyce 


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