Showing posts with label book #4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book #4. Show all posts

Friday 23 June 2017

More on the docks, and Leo Varadkar

Ireland's latest taoiseach (prime minister) happens to be gay, young (38) and have a dad from India. Cue plenty of international headlines making out like our country has suddenly become ultra progressive. As if.

Friday 27 May 2016

Grangegorman Military Cemetery


Grangegorman Military Cemetery is back in the news again. Yesterday morning Canada's Ambassador to Ireland, Kevin Vickers, pounced on a protester during a State ceremony to remember the British soldiers killed in the Easter Rising.

Monday 18 April 2016

Cromwell's Quarters, Murdering Lane, or The 39 (or is it 40?) Steps


For most of its life, right through the Victorian age, it was known as "Murdering Lane" or "Murdering-Lane" with a hyphen. Or "The Murd'ring Lane". Like the title of a bloodthirsty crime novel.

Boqueria, Stoneybatter



"Whaddya mean, it's a destination restaurant?" Colley, a regular character in the Moss Reid series of novels, sounds more narky than usual this morning. "What's a destination restaurant when it's at home?"

Saturday 19 March 2016

Stoneybatter skyline


Music documentarian Myles O'Reilly shot his classy new video of Anna-Mieke Bishop and her band a couple of days ago. It gives a relatively unusual view of Stoneybatter from up on the roof, during a sublime sunset. The music's great too.

Saturday 5 March 2016

Arbour Hill Cemetery #1


Arbour Hill's military cemetery is the last resting place of 14 of the leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising. It is currently undergoing a revamp.

Wednesday 10 February 2016

Green Street Courthouse



Ireland's juryless courts are back in the news this week after two gangland shootings in Dublin, and Sinn Fein has made the abolition of the Special Criminal Court (SCC) an election issue.

Tuesday 12 January 2016

Arbour Hill Church, Stoneybatter


Arbour Hill's church and cemetery will feature prominently in Dublin's Easter 1916 centenary commemorations. And in Book #4 of the Moss Reid series too, as it happens. You heard it here first.

Monday 20 July 2015

Berlin #4: Smithfield's 'Checkpoint Charlie'


Back in 1965, Smithfield Square and other parts of the northside of Dublin were transformed into Berlin, to much excitement and hoopla.

Richard Burton was in town - with Liz Taylor in tow - to film The Spy Who Came In From The Cold.

Sunday 19 July 2015

Berlin #3: the 'real' Checkpoint Charlie



So I'm in Berlin, doing research for book #4. I have vowed not to "do" Checkpoint Charlie.

Waste of time. Give it a miss. Sure hasn't it been done ("to death" I almost added, before thinking twice) in gazillions of films and spy novels and documentaries?

Friday 17 July 2015

Berlin #2: Year Zero

Before my first research visit to Berlin I did some desk research, as you do. Tripadvisor, Google Streetview, the usual stuff. And YouTube. A lot of YouTube.

I wanted a rough visual idea of what Berlin must have been like at the end of WWII, and during the Cold War as a divided city. So I'd still be a superficial tourist, yet having a better idea of the city's layers of history.

Friday 10 July 2015

Berlin #1: a city of layers


So there's this billboard at street level on Oranienstraße in the Kreuzberg district of Berlin. Its posters have slowly built up on each other, layer upon layer upon layer, until the layers are about a foot thick.