Dublin

A Writer's City

Christopher Morash author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:9th Mar '23

Should be back in stock very soon

Dublin cover

This book offers a detailed exploration of Dublin's literary heritage, showcasing neighborhoods that inspired renowned writers, including Dublin's own James Joyce.

In Dublin, readers embark on a captivating journey through one of the world's most renowned literary cities. This book serves as a detailed map, guiding enthusiasts through various neighborhoods that have profoundly influenced writers such as Jonathan Swift, James Joyce, Anne Enright, and Sally Rooney. Each area is carefully illustrated, complete with maps that help readers visualize the rich literary landscape of Dublin.

The essence of Dublin lies in its connection to the words and lives of its writers, which weave an invisible tapestry throughout the city's streets. As one strolls through the city center, the echoes of James Joyce’s characters, like Leopold Bloom and Stephen Dedalus, seem to linger in the air. Beyond the bustling streets, an unassuming residential area overlooking Dublin Bay reveals the home of Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney, while just a few blocks away, readers can find the birthplace of another Nobel Prize winner, W. B. Yeats. The book highlights these literary landmarks, inviting readers to reflect on the lives and works of these iconic figures.

Dublin unfolds like a love letter to literature, encouraging readers to delve into the city’s rich history and its profound impact on the literary world. With its custom maps and vivid illustrations, this book is an essential companion for anyone wishing to explore the vibrant literary heritage of Dublin, making it an unforgettable experience for book lovers and travelers alike.

'Dublin: A Writer's City is a comprehensive guide to this incomprehensibly graphomane capital, less city than town, less town than village, less village than inkpot. Christopher Morash's book is engrossing, enlightening, relaxedly scholarly and splendidly entertaining.' John Banville
'Here is the Dublin I know and love. This is an invaluable guide to a living, changing city; one that is rich in stories as well as books. Moving lightly from the deep past to the present day, Christopher Morash has managed to be affectionate, accurate and comprehensive, all at once.' Anne Enright
'… a fitting tribute to the rich literary history of Dublin.' Publishers Weekly
'We often think of literary giants such as Oscar Wilde, WB Yeats, James Joyce and Samuel Beckett, but while Chris Morash's new book explores the contributions of these behemoths, it also goes much further. It takes us by the hand from Dublin's elegant Georgian facades down back alleys to hear the hundreds of pamphleteers, poets and playwrights chattering incessantly back and forth across the centuries.' Elizabeth O'Neill, Sunday Business Post
'… a fascinating new book, Dublin: A Writer's City...brilliantly joins up the jigsaw of the lives that different generations of Dublin writers lived … If you want a book that pieces together Behan's inner city, Eavan Boland's Dundrum, Roddy Doyle's fictional Barrytown or the Howth heather where Molly Bloom said yes, then Morash's book is a joy to dip into and see familiar places revealed in a fresh light.' Dermot Bolder, Dublin Evening Herald
'Dublin, a Writer's City manages to be compendious in a small space, busy as the streets themselves and true to the remarkable spirit of a town that insists, decade after decade, a century ago and next year, in nurturing, goading and facilitating some of the most vibrant literature to be found in the English-speaking world (an unfashionable opinion … Moving into the 21st century, it respects a living tradition and brings us a crucial step further along.' Anne Enright, The Irish Times
'A wonderfully rich account of the Irish capital's impressive writerly heritage … the book is lavishly illustrated with numerous unfamiliar images from the archives, and is itself written in a beautiful style that adds to the very literary culture that the author seeks to celebrate.' James Moran, The Tablet
'… the one word that quintessentially sums up Dublin – A Writer's City is inspiring.' David Marx, David Marx:Book Reviews

ISBN: 9781108831642

Dimensions: 235mm x 161mm x 21mm

Weight: 690g

332 pages