Belfast Book Festival 2016 | Page 26

A Poetry Tour Of Ireland Martina Devlin About Sisterland Rob Doyle & Frankie Gaffney With Kevin Quinn With Margaret Ward With Paul McVeigh Crescent Arts Centre Monday 13 June – 1.15pm Tickets: £7 (inc. Light Lunch) / £5 (event only) Crescent Arts Centre Monday 13 June – 5.30pm Tickets: £6/£4 Crescent Arts Centre Monday 13 June – 7-8pm Tickets: £6/£4 Follow poet and critic Kevin Quinn as he introduces and reads over 20 poems written about places around Ireland. Among our guides along the way are Derek Mahon writing about Portrush, Louis MacNeice on Carrickfergus and, less well known, Cushendun, Paul Muldoon on The Burren, Patrick Kavanagh on Monaghan, Philip Larkin on both Belfast and Dublin, Michael Longley on Mayo and the redoubtable Francis Mahony on those glorious bells of Shandon. Welcome to Sisterland. A world ruled by women. A world designed to be perfect. Dublin Seven is the violent story of Shane, a small-time dealer. Having just left school and keen to assert his independence, he loses himself in the Celtic Tiger nightlife. Kevin Quinn has published poetry in anrange of journals in Britain and Ireland. His talks on poets and poetry have found audiences in venues such as the Linen Hall Library, Down and Fermanagh Museums as well as in schools and colleges. Here, women and men are kept separate. Women lead highly controlled and suffocating lives, while men are subordinate – used for labour and breeding. Sisterland’s leaders have been watching Constance and recognise that she’s special. Selected to reproduce, she finds herself alone with a man for the first time. But the mate chosen for her isn’t what she expected – and she begins to see a darker side to Sisterland. Constance’s misgivings about the regime mount. Is she the only one who questions this unequal society, or are there other doubters? Martina Devlin is a bestselling author and award-winning journalist. She started writing fiction after winning a Hennessy Literary Award for her first short story in the 1996, and has won or been shortlisted for a variety of literary awards including the Royal Society of Literature’s VS Pritchett Prize. 26 Soon his life is drugs, music and gangsters. But as the Celtic Tiger ends, so does Shane’s luck. Frankie Gaffney came of age in Dublin, immersed in the city’s underworld. In his mid-twenties he left this behind attending Trinity College to study English Literature. A man roams a Dublin industrial park and meets a strange vagrant. A woman takes part in an unusual sleep experiment. A Nietzsche - obsessed man clings to his girlfriend’s red shoes. Layering narratives and splicing fiction with non-fiction, This is the Ritual tells of the ecstatic, the desperate and the uncertain. Rob Doyle’s acclaimed debut, Here Are the Young Men, was chosen as a book of the year by the Irish Times, Independent, Sunday Times and Sunday Business Post, and shortlisted in the Irish Book Awards. Up By The Roots With Sinéad Morrissey, Piers Hellawell & The Fidelio Trio Crescent Arts Centre Monday 13 June – 8.15pm Tickets: £10/£8 Beethoven - Piano Trio, Op 70 ‘Ghost’ Piers Hellawell/Sinéad Morrissey – Up By The Roots Schoenberg - Verklärte Nacht A highlight of this year’s Festival. Featuring the Fidelio Trio, poet Sinéad Morrissey and composer Piers Hellawell, they present their collaborative work. Up by the Roots approaches the relation of music and text in a new way; the interaction of trio and poetic texts respects, though later dissolves, the bounds between these separate territories. Three pieces for piano trio are interleaved with three poems. However, such is the volatility, the alternations become more subversive. As music seeps into poem and poetry becomes sound, we move closer to an operatic scena. The Fidelio Trio have been shortlisted for the prestigious 2016 Royal Philharmonic Society Ensemble Award, following a long collaborative relationship with Piers Hellawell. It seemed appropriate that, the Fidelio Trio based in London should collaborate with an English composer working in Belfast; the catalyst being Belfast poet, Sinéad Morrissey. belfastbookfestival.com 27