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The Blackstaff Press is a publishing company in Newtownards, County Down, Northern Ireland. Founded in 1971, [3] it publishes printed books on a range of subjects (mainly, but not exclusively, of Irish interest) and, since 2011, has also published e-books. [3] It receives financial support from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland. [4]
Judy Garland and the Cold War (Belfast: Blackstaff Press; 1976) The Selected James Simmons (Belfast: Blackstaff Press; 1978) Constantly Singing (Belfast: Blackstaff Press; 1980) From the Irish (Belfast: Blackstaff Press; 1985) Poems, 1956–1986 ([Introduction by Edna Longley] Dublin, The Gallery/UK, Bloodaxe 1986) At Six O'Clock in the Silence ...
Fergus O'Hare (Irish: Fergus Ó hÍr [1]) is an Irish musician, activist and former republican politician, active in Northern Ireland.. O'Hare was involved in the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland as a member of People's Democracy in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The Rain Dance: Poems New and Revised (Blackstaff Press, 1978) Kites in Spring: a Belfast boyhood (Blackstaff Press, 1980) The Selected John Hewitt (Blackstaff Press, 1981) Mosaic (Blackstaff Press, 1981) Loose Ends (Blackstaff Press, 1983) Freehold and Other Poems (Blackstaff Press, 1986) The Collected Poems of John Hewitt (Ed. Frank Ormsby ...
Woundlicker is a novel by the journalist [1] Jason Johnson, [2] which is set in Belfast, Northern Ireland.The story takes place during the slow-moving Northern Ireland peace process talks of 2004 and is written as the verbatim transcription of a covert British government recording.
Martin Lynch was born in the docks area of Belfast in 1950. He left school at 15 and became a cloth cutter, then a docker until 1973, when he became a full-time organiser for the Republican Clubs . In 1975, he organised a tour of community centres with John Arden ’s Non-Stop Connolly Show.
Born Patrick Joseph O'Connor in Belfast to Bernard and Annie (née McGarry) O'Connor, Fiacc's father was a barman who left for the United States when Fiacc was very young. . Fiacc resided with his maternal grandparents who had recently moved to the Markets area of South Belfast after being burned out of their home in Lisburn in which all their furniture was burned by anti-Catholic riote
Gerald Dawe was born in north Belfast, Northern Ireland, and grew up with his mother, sister, and grandmother.He lived mostly in the Skegoniell area and attended Seaview Primary School and then Orangefield Boys Secondary School across the city in East Belfast.
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