‘Twas in the Month of June …

Things got busy last month.

I started with a pre-booked week in Annaghmakerrig at the Tyrone Guthrie Centre. It’s a miracle I got there – the latest addition to the McDonnell household cost me the week’s stay in vet bills!

Meet Nutmeg – 

nutmeg

Well, Nutmeg was left in the care of her ‘auntie’, and I headed off to Monaghan in the hot but glorious early summer to do some concentrated work on my next collection. This time I was staying in the ground floor Morning Room. Stick with me long enough and I may show you photos of every guest room in the Big House!

TG desk view  TG bookcase

TG desk

Aren’t the shutters and the panelling beautiful! Unusually for Ireland, I had to close the blinds to keep the sun off the laptop screen, and it was too warm to sit out before lunch. Some of the hardy lot went swimming in the lake. As always, the food was delicious – especially the salads. We all met up in the conservatory on the Friday evening for a read through of work, and chat of course. The moon had risen over the lake as I made my way back to the Big House. A magical stay.

I stuck to the desk for most of the time; closing the laptop on evening after 10pm. One morning I lifted my head and looked out the bay window to see a hare sitting on the lawn in front of me. More magic.  So much got done: at least 14 new or redrafted poems and more submissions than I had thought about. (But of course some rejections have come in already – har, har.) Also, prep work on a bursary submission which I finished off at home. Fingers crossed, loveens!  

My last full day there happened to be my birthday. I headed into Newbliss for the paper – they were busy in the fields making the most of the sunshine and dry weather. I drove a few kilometres up the hill to drop by Tyrone Guthrie’s resting place. (Actually, it was his birthday yesterday.)

hay guthrie grave

The next day, I broke my journey home; staying with two dear friends who live in Longford. They spoiled me rotten: espresso cocktails and a deee-vine homemade chocolate birthday cake. What a perfect way to end a working holiday. Where would we be without our friends?

cocktail      birthday cake                  

And it was back to work, big time. I had to prep and deliver a talk/reading for Clare County Libraries to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Yeats being awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. The event was a part of the national Decades of Centenaries project. It took a bit of figuring out – Yeats in an hour, anyone? In the end, I went for some themes: looking at his time in London, his family, Maud – of course – but also his George and his children. And, given where I live, the West – Coole, Lady Gregory and all of his friends, Thoor Ballylee, and finally Sligo and Ben Bulben – with poems to accompany the slides. We had a good crowd. I challenged myself and am glad I did.

Yeats              banner books

The last day of the month found me in Kilrush, in west Clare.  Sally Vince has opened another branch of Banner Books in the town, and it’s thriving. The space lends itself to being a venue for readings and they have started monthly open mics on the last Friday of each month. Worth keeping an eye out for on social media, especially if you happen to be holidaying in the area. It was a shame the weather had turned – it was non-stop rain last week. Even though I couldn’t get out of the car, I drove up to Shanakyle graveyard and waved a greeting in to my great-grandmother. Back at Banner Books, I read a poem about her from my first collection, one about her father that was published in the Irish edition of Coast to Coast to Coast, and new poems relating to my Kilrush ancestors and holidaying in Kilkee. ‘Hanging out with Che’ got its first hearing – as I said to the listeners, it came with terms and conditions. It’s always a bit scary bringing a very new poem out into the daylight!  There may be a few tweaks, but it’s nearly there. There was a good turn out and a great variety of work – in style and content. It was lovely to meet up again with Thomas Lynch – who read two poems. He’s over from the States, in the ancestral home in Moveen at the moment.

So, yes, a busy month. Another project was slotted in too, but I think it needs a separate post. June’s The Western Skyline was also my final show for Kinvara FM. I have a lot on my plate between the work I do to pay the bills, family commitments, and trying to make my next collection the best it can be. Something had to give and, for now, it was the radio show. I’ll miss the studio and I thank my fellow volunteers for their friendship and all the radio fun. But, you never know: maybe when I’ve retired …. 

As I used to say at the end of every show, Take care of yourselves. ‘Til next time.

radio station

Burns, baby, Burns! – Readings for #BurnsNight

Burns Night reading at Banner Books

I’m really looking forward to this – as listener as much as reader!

Ruth Marshall – one of our Seven Sisters Poets – and I will be reading on Burns Night in Banner Books, Ennistymon. It’s all happening this coming Saturday the 25th, 6-8pm.  Sally, the owner,  is promising a wee dram and vegan ‘haggis’, so what’s keeping you?  PLUS Bookshop Dog may be in attendance.

Ruth is from Scotland, so in my eyes she’s a Burns expert.  She’s a great performer of her own work, and I’d say she’ll do Robbie proud.

We’ll both read some of our own work as well.  I’ll just give you one or two Burns poems – maybe even sing a verse, if I can keep my nerve.

Photo © Banner Books

Follow Banner Books on Twitter and like their Facebook Page – and if you’re in north Clare, drop in. Sally has a great selection of new and old books, great cards, and quirky gifts too.

 

 

The Wonder Workshop – and a new precept!

Prepping my Wonder workshop. Under supervision!

A few weeks ago, I was asked by Clare County Library would I give a poetry workshop based around the book Wonder by RJ Palacio.  Halimah, a teacher from Ennistymon Vocational School, had approached them with the request.

At first, I was hesitant: writing poetry around another book? Would that be restrictive? How to cram a  workshop around a few hundred pages when I’ve only got 90 minutes to do so? And I don’t have children. Wonder had slipped under my radar. I watched an interview with the author on youtube.

I told Dolores in the library service that I’d develop something around several themes, especially that of bullying. [Coincidentally, this week the call-in show on our national radio station is full of adults talking about bullying: their own or their children’s; even now-grown-up bullies who have sought out their childhood victims to apologise. These discussions and stories are happening while their children are in school.]

The other thing I said was that the children would have to have read the whole book!

Well, I needn’t have worried on that score. I soon learned from a Facebook post by Banner Books in Ennistymon that this was very much a community read.  A ‘One Book, One Community’ project in fact.

The One Book, One Community has a programme of events around Wonder:
Readings with local primary schools
Poster competition with local primary schools
Ennistymon Vocational School afternoon tea book club on 13 November at the Falls Hotel & Spa
EVS Poetry workshop on 14 November [That would be me, I guess!]
EVS Coffee morning on 19 November
Wonder film showing at the Falls Hotel on 22 November to round off the whole project.

AND SO … tomorrow I head to Ennistymon to give two workshops to over forty First Years from Ennistymon Vocational School. It’s a couple of firsts for me: my first secondary-school poetry workshops, and the first time that I’ve specifically designed a workshop around a theme – let alone another genre of writing!

Thanks, Ennistymon and thanks, Clare County Library Service. It’s good to be pushed beyond our comfort zones. That’s today’s precept. I’m sure Auggie would approve.

Image result for wonder book