Celebrate Bloomsday 2018 on the Costa del Sol. Note to circulate to Joyceans. Photographs from the Beach 2018. Bloomsday 2018 in Spain Talk Radio, Europe - tre - report and interviews by Ger Sweeney, Live on Eire , Monday 18 June 2018. The piece can be replayed here. Talk_Radio_Europe_in_Spain_ 2018-06-18_18-00-00.mp3 L isten from 43 to 53 minutes or the complete show is one hour. I also enclose a copy of photos that were taken on the day on the beach. https://drive.google.com/ drive/folders/ 1LDpDyCJ3kqM0kVjIDvnFtu1uWVL8W Dlg A little story from The Paris Review from 2018. http://artrogersstore. blogspot.com/2018/06/are-we- all-joyceans-here-then.html Great piece by Ger Sweeney; lovely photos by Dolores, as usual; excellent story in the Paris Review; lovely morning with friends on the Bloomsday beach. It doesn't get much better. Thanks for enriching our lives, Roger. Regards Colman. http:
James Joyce by Roger Cummiskey. When we think of Ireland, we think of a country that has a rich cultural heritage. A place which seems to be bursting at the seams with poets, novelists and playwrights, who all seem to have been gifted with an incredible innate sense of storytelling and drama. If you were to check the list of Nobel Prize winners since it’s inception, you’d find that Ireland ranks eighth in terms of how many it has produced over the years. Just what is it that makes the Irish so good at writing and the creative process? The first Irish foray into literature Culturally speaking, Ireland lays claim to the fact that it has one of the oldest forms of vernacular literature in the world, with only Greek or Latin able to match it. The Irish peoples were literate from the very earliest centuries, utilising a simple writing system called “Ogham” which was a way of communicating via inscriptions on little stone tablets. One of the very first proper written Irish wor
Post Code V95 AC94. Kilfenora Wikipedia Kilfenora (Irish: Cill Fhionnúrach, meaning "Church of the Fertile Hillside" or "Church of the White Brow", is a village and a civil parish in County Clare, Ireland. It is situated south of the karst limestone region known as the Burren. Since medieval times when it was the episcopal see of the Bishop of Kilfenora, it has been known as the "City of the Crosses" for its seven (now five) high crosses. The village had around 220 inhabitants in 2011. Much of the TV show Father Ted (1995–98) was filmed there. Kilfenora Cill Fhionnúrach Village St. Fachtna's Catholic church and the "West Cross" in the mist Kilfenora is located in County Clare, Ireland. Coordinates: 52°59′25″N 9°13′0″W Elevation: 20 m (70 ft) Population (2011): • Urban 222 . Kilfenora Abbey, cathedral and crosses; Kilfenora church at Kilcarragh A plaque on the Kilfenora village hall commemorating "Ted Fes
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