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Topic: Leland Bardwell


  
  Irish Emigrant - News and jobs for the global Irish community
From this situation the author has woven a story of anger and betrayal, of apathy and withdrawal, a descent into depression and the unlikely bonding of the three protagonists, and all of this against a background of continuing life in the Donegal countryside.
Nan and Jim have each devised a means of escape from an intolerable situation brought on by the arrival of Charles, and Ms Bardwell examines with rare insight their attempts to adapt their relationship to accommodate the intruder.
Leland Bardwell was born in India and grew up in Leixlip, County Kildare.
www.emigrant.ie /article.asp?iCategoryID=49&iArticleID=3040   (384 words)

  
 Salmon Publishing Online Bookshop | The White Beach, by Leland Bardwell
Leland Bardwell's poetry is witty, full of sharp intimate honesty, full of truth and surprises.
She is a poet who has felt the shocks of our time, the private impacts and the historic changes.
Bardwell has always been known as an original wordsmith, honing down her work with an unerring eye, standing her ground uninfluenced by fashionable trends, and one who is not afraid of a humorous touch.
www.salmonpoetry.com /white.html   (157 words)

  
 Leland Bardwell   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The dates and publishers given here are for first editions.
However, I realise you may be looking for current editions, so in-print books by Leland Bardwell may be purchased directly from
Leland Bardwell was born in India of Irish parents in 1928 and was brought to Ireland at the age of two.
www.irishwriters-online.com /lelandbardwell.html   (224 words)

  
 Patrick Kavanagh - No Mans Fool   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The Loopline Film production is intended to be broadcasted on RTÉ on November 30th.
Dermot Healey (Novelist and Poet) and Leland Bardwell (Novelist)
Leland Bardwell (Poet and Friend of Patrick Kavanagh)
www.filmireland.net /news/kavanagh.htm   (79 words)

  
 RTE.ie Entertainment - RTÉ, Gate Theatre to celebrate Kavanagh
The show, which celebrates the life and work of the Irish poet who was born in 1904 and died in 1967, will be in two parts.
The first, to be broadcast live on RTÉ Radio 1 at 8pm, will consist of Macdara Woods, Leland Bardwell, Tom McIntyre and Dermot Healy reading Kavanagh's 'The Great Hunger'.
The second half will have Paul Durcan, Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin and John Montague joining the other poets to read their favourite Kavanagh poem, plus one of their own.
www.rte.ie /arts/2004/0917/kavanaghp.html   (135 words)

  
 Patrick Kavanagh, Uncollected : Adventure Near Westland Row   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
She left school and trained for office work, worked for a time in Bord Fáilte, then in office jobs in London in the 1950s and 60s, a friend of artists and writers including Robert Colquhoun, Robert MacBryde, George Barker, Elizabeth Smart and Anthony Cronin.
Met Patrick Kavanagh there in the flat of the poet Leland Bardwell, married him after a nine year relationship in 1967, the year of his death.
She had returned to Dublin to marry, and she continued to work there after her husband's death until her own health failed in the mid-1980s.
www.tcd.ie /English/patrickkavanagh/katherinekavanagh.html   (200 words)

  
 Irish American Post   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Prior to 1985, there were three or four women who had published in the late 1970s and found a niche: Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Eavan Boland, Máire Mhac an tSaoi..
Others, such as Leland Bardwell and Eithne Strong had published several collections and been instrumental in the literary world of the '50s and '60s, but were not "establishment figures."
Women didn't come forward with their work, but they were there.
www.gaelicweb.com /irishampost/year2001/03march/featured/featured04.html   (898 words)

  
 Teenreads.com -- THE PENGUIN BOOK OF IRISH FICTION edited by Colm Toibin
This anthology is perhaps the most comprehensive anthology of Irish writing that's ever been produced.
Spanning 400 years and 1200 pages, editor Colm Toibin has done a masterful job at collecting the well-known (Jonathan Swift, James Joyce, Roddy Doyle) with the less well-known (Rosa Mulholland, Mairtin O'Cadhain, Leland Bardwell), and created a book that should be on every Irishman's bookcase.
Toibin, born in Ireland and hailed by the Irish Independent as "the best Irish writer of his generation," knows Irish fiction.
www.teenreads.com /reviews/0670891088.asp   (254 words)

  
 Obituaries, 2-11-99
Arrangements were made by Morrison Funeral Home, Butler, N.J. BARDWELL Scotia, NY Donald L. Bardwell of Scotia, died Monday, Feb. 8, 1999, at Ellis Hospital after being stricken at his workplace.
He was a service man for the Buhrmaster Energy Group in Scotia for 14 years, he belonged to the CAMPER Bowling League at Boulevard Bowl in Schenectady and was involved in coaching in both The Little League and Babe Ruth Leagues in Scotia.
Survivors include his wife, Ellen F. Bardwell of Scotia; three sons, Timothy Bardwell of Glenville, Donald Mark Bardwell of Chicopee, Mass.
www.recordonline.com /obits/1999/02/11.html   (3540 words)

  
 Anglo Celt Newspaper - Cavan, Fermanagh, Monaghan, Ireland
For more than forty years Tommy has been sharing his many talents in the U.S., the U.K. and back home.
Next Thursday in Bailieborough library Leland Bardwell is giving a workshop in Storytelling from 2pm to 4pm.
She will be in the Cootehill Library and Arts Centre on Friday, May 24 from 2.30pm to 4.30pm.
www.unison.ie /anglo_celt/index.php3?ca=42&issue_id=7405   (255 words)

  
 Deeply Rooted in a Local World   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
The extract which appeared in Cyphers 10 years ago now has another life as one of the novel's seminal set-pieces, where Sligo-born Ollie Ewing, the protagonist, discovers something nasty in the back of a lorry near the London building site he works in.
What I did was to write a story up to that point, and then beyond it.
Healy is not the only writer in the locality: Leland Bardwell lives nearby, as does Molly McCluskey.
www.rossespoint.com /rooted.htm   (1200 words)

  
 ireland.com / Explore Ireland   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Originally from Kilkeel, Co Down, the author of Resurrection Man and The Blue Tango has high praise for the organisers for Scriobh.
"People like Leland Bardwell and Dermot Healy have always been involved and they have their ear to the ground on what is going on in world literature and they are able to reflect that," he says.
He will be reading from The Blue Tango, a work based on the unsolved murder of Patricia Curran in Belfast in 1952.
www.ireland.com /explore/festivals/2001/0901/scribs0709.htm   (313 words)

  
 Ireland - Books - Hotel Near   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Banville's talents show no sign of waning in his most recent novel Eclipse (Picador), in which an actor plays out his own psychological crisis by a return to his childhood home.
Leland Bardwell, The House (Brandon Books o/p; Longwood o/p); There We Have Been (Attic; In Book o/p).
Quirky, bleak prose, often dealing with domestic violence, male cruelty, drink and poverty; but funny too, in a fl way.
www.hotelnear.com /2758/6742g/Ireland-Books.html   (6959 words)

  
 Connemara.net news: Summer 99 Creative Writing Workshops at Roundstone Public Library   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Desmond O’Grady a major force in Irish poetry for many years, and who has translated the work of many European poets.
Leland Bardwell, poet and novelist, whose 'No Regrets', a play based on the life of the French singer Edith Piaf was produced at Dublin’s Olympia Theatre.
The four days will include workshops, readings, and lectures.
www.connemara.net /news/index.php?id=187   (163 words)

  
 Monaghan County Council - Water Supply from a Well   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Published thirty years after the Dublin-Monaghan bombings, Later On is a unique book to which writers born or living in Monaghan have contributed short stories, essays, poems and excerpts from novels.
It includes work from Eugene McCabe, Mary O'Donnell, Patrick MacEntee, Nell McCafferty (a frequent user of the cafÈ that was blown up), Pat McCabe, Frank McNally and Leland Bardwell.
The essays cover subjects as diverse as geography, sport, and Monaghan in the 1940s.
www.monaghan.ie /news/memorialbook.asp   (312 words)

  
 Western People: Mixed luck for U-13 lads
Aghamore played Crossmolina at home yesterday evening and play Ballaghaderreen away next Monday evening.
A reading to mark the launch by Blackstaff Press of Leland Bardwell’s fifth novel entitled “Mother to a Stranger” will take place in the Irish Writers’ Centre, Dublin at 7 pm on 26th September.
Leland Bradwell has published collections of poetry, stage plays and radio plays.
www.westernpeople.ie /news/story.asp?j=544   (410 words)

  
 The Times Herald- Record Online Obituaries 2-10-99
In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to The American Cancer Society, P.O. Box 1151, Murphy, N.C. Arrangements were made by Millspaugh Funeral Directors, Walden.
DONALD L. BARDWELL Scotia, NY Donald L. Bardwell of Sacandaga Rd., Scotia, died Monday, Feb. 8, 1999 at Ellis Hospital after being sticken at his workplace.
The son of harold and Luella Mills Bardwell, he was born in Mechanicville.
www.th-record.com /obits/1999/02/10.htm   (3482 words)

  
 Devoted to the cause of poetry
The list of Irish poets whose work has been featured reads like a roll-call of modern Irish poetic talent in the English language.
It includes Leland Bardwell, Paul Durcan, Seamus Heaney, Madge Heron, Michael Longley, Derek Mahon, Medhb McGuckian, Paul Muldoon, Eiléan Ní Chuilleanáin, Eithne Strong, Matthew Sweeney, Shaun Traynor and Macdara Woods.
The Irish issue was a prelude to other special numbers focusing on Scottish, Welsh, Canadian and Australian poetry.
members.fortunecity.com /seanfile/devoted.htm   (1254 words)

  
 fictionironwmoen
IRON WOMEN brings eighteen new stories from eighteen new voices, an often disturbing collection run through with a strong thread of wisdom, optimism, and the power of imagination.
The writers are Leland Bardwell, Jaq Bayles, Helen Dunmore, Daphne Glazer, Nicola Griffith, Anne Liddon, Anna McGrail, Devi Maharaj, Jan Maloney, C. Merriman, Liz Minnikin, Patricia Parris, Doreen Piano, Daphne Rock, Elizabeth Raintree, Sandi Russell, J.A. Tate and Wendy Wallace.
Click on one of these to visit another part of the site.
www.ironpress.co.uk /fironw.htm   (118 words)

  
 Yeats Society Sligo - International Summer School
She has received the Michael Hartnett Prize for poetry and is a member of the Irish academy of arts, Aosdána.
Leland Bardwell was born in India of Irish parents and brought to Ireland at a young age.
Her collections of poetry include The White Beach: New & Selected Poems (Salmon, 1998).
www.yeats-sligo.com /html/summer/readings.html   (1766 words)

  
 University of Delaware: ARCHIVE OF SALMON PUBLISHING, LTD.
Files of poets’ photographs and book covers complete the Administrative Series.
The Hour of Pan/Amá, 1992 F1 Manuscript and Proofs F2 Correspondence, Publicity, Reviews Bardwell, Leland.
The White Beach: New and Selected Poems 1960-1998, 1998 F3 Manuscript F4 Proofs F5 Correspondence, Publicity, Reviews Note: Includes autograph card from Maeve Binchy to the publisher.
www.lib.udel.edu /ud/spec/findaids/salmon.htm   (2095 words)

  
 The Poetry Kit - Poetry Magazines Ireland
Black Mountain Review - the magazine for new writing from Northern Ireland.
Editors: Leland Bardwell; Eilean Ni Chuilleanain; Pearse Hutchinson; Macdara Woods
Its aim is to publish new, up and coming poets along side some more established ones.
www.poetrykit.org /ireland/limags.htm   (223 words)

  
 Poetry Daily Prose Feature: Thomas Lynch, Booking Passage: We Irish and Americans
I took the bike to Carrigaholt one day and posted off a manuscript to Eilean Ni Chuilleanain, an editor at Cyphers.
I'd read and admired her work and the work of the consortium of Dublin writers – Pearse Hutchinson, Macdara Woods, and Leland Bardwell – who edited the magazine with her.
And while the everyday enterprise of the local businessman, husband and father, and citizen-at-large in a small midwestern place was one that suited me, the rich life of language, drawn from the idiomatic wellsprings of Moveen and its American cousins, informed by memory and imagination, was a constant preoccupation.
www.cstone.net /~poems/essalync.htm   (3503 words)

  
 NWPChecklist.html
The Lace Curtain: A Magazine of Poetry and Criticism No. 1
Brian Lynch, Kay Boyle, James Hogan, Pearse Hutchinson, Michael Smith, Macdara Woods, Paul Durcan, Tom Hill, Hayden Murphy, Howard McCord, Damien Kiberd, Trevor Joyce, Anthony Cronin, Bill Siverly, Eilean Ní Chuilleanáin, Knute Skinner, Anthony Kerrigan, Michael Hartnett, Leland Bardwell, James Liddy
Gerard Smyth, Mathieu Bénézet, Desmond O'Grady, Leland Bardwell, Brian Coffey, Geoffrey Hazard, Augustus Young, Michael Hartnett, Denis Devlin, Michael Smith, John Jordan, Trevor Joyce, Paul Murray, Brian Lynch, Gottfried Benn, Howard McCord, Eiléan Ni Chuilleanáin, Georg Trakl
indigo.ie /~tjac/Publishers/nwp_publications.htm   (334 words)

  
 Éigse
Cork University and Attic Press, John F. Deane,
7.15 Readings by poets Leland Bardwell, Patrick Galvin
Fri 5th Feb. Leland Bardwell and Robert O'Donoghue read at
homepage.eircom.net /~munsterlit/Newsletter3/_igse/_igse.html   (476 words)

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