235 memoirs longlisted
(810 memoirs submitted in total)
The Remorse of Heroes | AE Devlin |
Measuring Up | Aileen Hunt |
ADAM BURN | Alan McCormick |
The Sea-Bright Child | Alison Walker |
The Fraud | Allison Doyle |
Lapsed | amy klein |
Origins | Andrea Rosenhaft |
World Without End | Angela Finn |
Ripples | Angela Wray |
The Last Ace | Anne Wright |
The Innocents | Annie Kilmartin |
Fire! | Art Lester |
TREACLE & ME | Art Rogers |
LAST DAY ON EARTH – MEMORIES OF MY FATHER | Barb Hunt |
APPLES IN THE CELLAR OF DREAD AND DESIRE | Barbara Knott |
The Scarlet Dictionary | Barbara Lorna Hudson |
Knowing Heinrich | Barbara Mogerley |
When Grocer Jack Turned Pirate | Bea Davenport |
Have you got a boyfriend? | Beata Anna Fijalkowska |
The System | Bella Kemble |
A Trick On Daddy | Bernardino Marcelo |
A Memorable Holiday – A King, Cads and Curls | Beryl Trebble |
Moments | Beth Grosart |
Misty Memoires | Bette Guy |
The Red Dress | Bo Niles |
The Gift | Bo Niles |
The Death Of Ace | Brad Geyer |
My great grandfather and the story of the Nine Irons | Breda Joyce |
My Father | Bruce Stirling |
Julie | Carolyn Pearce |
North Cliff | Cassandra Keen |
Tasting Brick | Cassandra Keen |
Ruins | cecile berberat |
Some Stories Need Straight Telling | Chandra Masoliver |
Cynic | Chris RB Fay |
Perfect | Christine Hale |
I TOLD YOU SO, I TOLD YOU SO | CHRISTINE WEST |
Space – Time | claire hernandez |
Hugs | Clare Doran |
Serenade in Squalls | Courtney Zoffness |
There Are Spiders Inside | Cynthia Hyde |
The Brightest Star | Cynthia Kane |
Tiffany 34 | Daisy-Mae Perkins |
My Thing: A Year in Psychosis | Daniel Julian |
LEAVING THE CITY BEHIND | Daphne Sola |
Arty and the train | David David |
A drop of peace | David Lynch |
Whistling round the town | deborah murrish |
The Mermaid. | deborah murrish |
To Be Honest | Declan Hurley |
Mum in Memory | Denise Blake |
A Meditation on the Existential Threat of Violence Brought Home | Dermot O’Lynn |
How We Each See It | Diane Dolphin |
Moving on. | Dolores McCloskey |
An Indian Woman’s Hair | Donna Ward |
Caribbean time | Dordi Andersen |
Tarantulas, Southern Comfort, a Place to Shut My Eyes | Dorene O’Brien |
JUMPY JEWISH FEMALE SEEKS… | DORIS FERLEGER |
Feral | Dwayne Magee |
Mr. Bailey | E. L. Harris |
What It Is Like In Words | e.g. Jönsson |
A DAY OUT | Edra Ziesk |
The Rim. | Edward Smothers |
Santa Fe Stories | Eileen Cunniffe |
Ashes | Elisabeth Winkler |
Parking Lot | Ellen Ezorsky |
No One Plays Boxing | Emily Bullock |
THE AUCTION | Eoin Devereux |
When a Heart has no Ears | Erin Altrama |
Storykeepers | Erin Byrne |
Any Man’s Child | Euan Stuart |
The Ringmaster and the Tattooed Girl | Eufemia Fantetti |
Golfball in the Sun | Federay Holmes |
Sister Awake! | Fiona Ross |
The Typewriter | Fionnuala Enright |
BLOOD SUCKERS | Frances Kenny |
The Black Suit | Frank O’Shea |
The Playground | gabi burman |
Knowing | Gabi MacEwan |
First Day | Gail Anderson |
Payne Whitney, NYC 1972 | Gail Waldstein |
There But For The Grace | gavin vance |
Home | Gaylene Carbis |
Tremor ’71 | Geraldine Creed |
When They’re Laughing at You | Gererdene Gibbons |
Season Of The Witch | Gillian Haigh |
Summer in amongst long grasses | Gina Challen |
All Hat & No Cattle | Hazel Larkin |
How To Leave Your Husband (When You Know You Should) | Hazel Larkin |
advanced systems… | Helen Geoghegan |
The Trouble with Lying Is … | Honor Somerset |
Silence | Hugh Kiernan |
In for the ride | Ilaria Mirabile |
Knock on Effects of Dad’s Wisdom | Iris Woodford |
Leon | James Mulkerns |
‘Some brightness to hold in trust’ | Jane Buekett |
a slice of me in ’63 | Jane Fraser |
Road Scholars | Jane Guill |
Watching Lucy In the Fall | Jane Harrington |
NO DECENT GIRL | JANE HAYWARD |
Dandelions | Jane Norris |
Late but not too late | Jane Seaford |
A Life of Contrasts | Janette Coombes |
Voice | jeanne moore |
Unfathomable | Jenny Godbeer |
Mzungu on the Rebel Road | Jesse Thornburg |
Dumb-Dumb’s Revenge | Jim Brennan |
Seas | Joan Kerr |
Rowton House and the Easter CND Rally | Johnny Carr |
Cooper | Jones Irwin |
The Working Life Of A Headcase | Jordan Adams |
Gypsies and Tramps | Judi Blaze |
Full Circle | Judith OConnor |
World Views | Judith OConnor |
Every Picture Tells a Story | judith pickle |
Between Conflict and Desire: A Woman Now | Julie Fisher |
Spinifex Baby | karen dermer |
The Fighter of Notthinghill Gate | karen hunt |
My Father, the Magician | Katherine Palmer |
I BUILD A DREAM | Kathleen June |
Belated Urgency | Kathleen Langstroth |
Postcards from the Replacement Bus | Kati Bumbera |
First Cut | Ken Tracey |
Velvet | Kieran Bates |
The View From Under the Table | Kristin Gleeson |
Hello, Goodbye | Kristina Branch |
If you gave me your life I would lose it | Kristine Rothbury |
Letters From Paradise | kristine simelda |
Jack | Laura Creber |
The Story About The Cat | Laura Fanning |
Six Secrets | Lee MURRAY |
Hide on Holly | Leonard McDonnell |
Four and Three Quarters | Lesley Quayle |
My Turn | Lily White |
Doctors | Linda Boroff |
The Right to Bear Arms | Linda Cutting |
Detention | Lori Schafer |
Ashore | Luellen Fletcher |
SUITED | luft man |
The Summer of Bicycles and Rickshaws | Makarand Nalgirkar |
LOVE OUTLASTS MEMORY | Mal King |
Lessons Learned | mandarama |
Birth | Margaret Grundstein |
Anointed | Margo Barnes |
Memory Pocket | Mariad Whisker |
Game Plan | Marie Curran |
Boston Tattoo | Marie Gethins |
Planespotting by the Castle | Mark Blackburn |
A Lifetime in One Day | Mark Brom |
The Spirit of the Stones | Martin Cromie |
Memoir of an Unknown Man | Martin Leyland |
Blue Fins | Martin Raim |
The Census | Mary Ann Williams |
The Pink Door | Mary Halpin |
Zappatos y Regalos | Mary Reed |
Tea Leaves | Maude Dunn |
Luscus | Maureen Boyle |
Beaten path | Melanie Veenstra |
Surprise | Mia Doring |
And Johnny Ray Cried | michael collins |
A Term at St Hughes | Michael Coutts |
Not My Life | Michael Li Cha Zi |
Two Beer Drive | Michele Lovell |
Once More With Feeling | michelle brock |
Some Kind of Magic | Mike Carson |
Just One of the Guys | Mike Gadell |
An Adoption Tale | Misty Mathis |
Leaving | Mo Kermode |
Cape Cod, God, and a Minivan | Moshe Schulman |
Names | Nan Pokerwinski |
Kritios Boy | Nancy Ludmerer |
Hell Run | Niamh O’Sullivan |
Erotomaniac | Nick Leach |
Ward S4 | Nicki Heinen |
St Anne’s | Nicki Heinen |
Sunday Afternoons With Ian. | Nicola Pearson |
Dorchester Park. Drumming our way to the future. | Orla McAlinden |
Prodigal Daughter | Pat Brett |
Broadening My Horizons | Patricia Smith |
I am a Phoenix | Patricia Whittingham |
Kings Over All Who Are Proud | Paul McGranaghan |
Top Drawer | Paul Michel |
The hyacinth under the stairs | paula cunningham |
WINTER BIRDS | Pauline Holdstock |
Menopausal Puberty | Peter Bergman |
Nothing Changes | Phyllida Clarke |
Behind the Wallpaper | Phyllis Richardson |
Then and Now | Pip Newling |
Looking Back | R Kinnish |
Like The Flower | Rachelle Hicks |
Enduring Passion | Riba Taylor |
Drifting Along | Robert Headley |
Schr-r-r-r | robert mason |
A Servant to Servants | Roberta George |
The Tear Tree | Robin Mcfarland |
Heart | Robyn Thomas |
Duck paté and the First Law of Thermodynamics. | Roger Lightfoot |
Threads of Inheritance | Rosalie Yoakam |
The Journey | Rosalind Davies |
Learning to Dress my Mother | Rosemary Jones |
Gillyflower | Rosie Ford |
Things Can Get Lost | Rosie Jackson |
Disentangling. | rueyn |
A Letter from My Mother. | rueyn |
Words | Saffron Marchant |
Descent | Saffron Marchant |
Collapse | Saffron Marchant |
Weighty Issues | Sarah Jones |
The Witches’ Curse | Sarah Line Letellier |
Honor Killing | Savi Fitch |
A Place For Everything | Sean Hardie |
Heroes | Sheila Llewellyn |
All Those Promises, Sweetly Sung | Shereen Pandit |
Customs Declarations | Simon Peter Eggertsen |
Dreams are Only Dreams | Stephanie Allen Early |
Garage Doors | Stephanie Nugent |
Willesden 1967 | Stephen Pullman |
Taming Tigers | stephie hart |
The Trouble with Harry | Sue Cartledge |
Smog | Susan Davis |
The Visit | Susan DuMond |
BIG YELLOW TAXI | Susanna Clayson |
Land of Shannon | Suzanne Van Atten |
The Diary of a Breakup | Svetlana Kortchik |
Yesteryears’ Greener Grass | Terence Hadert |
Snapshots of a Cold War Childhood | Terri Favro |
The Present from America | Terry Lynch |
The Jesus in the Purple Jacket | Tim Lash |
Seasons in the sun | Tish McPhilemy |
Martha | TOM FOX |
Remembering Nan | Tracy Lloyd |
For You, Dad, You | William Gee |
Love in a Time of War | Winsome La ne |
Shilling Shenanigans | wolfgang eulitz |
Days When | Zara Katharine |
Vivid, astute, gripping, evocative. These stories utterly transported me. – Sarah Hall (Short Story)
In the landscape of emotion and folly, Flash writers are a fearless lot – these stories prove it. – Michelle Elvy (Flash Fiction)
… combining the personal and particular with the universal, each touching in surprising ways … experiences that burn deep, that need to be told. – Sean Lusk (Memoir)
Strong poems. First place is a poem I wish I’d written! – Billy Collins (Poetry)
More… a showcase of disquiet, tension, subversion and surprise …
so many skilled pieces … gem-like, compressed and glinting, little worlds in entirety that refracted life and ideas … What a joy!
– Sarah Hall
… memoirs pinpointing precise
feelings of loss and longing and desire.
– Sean Lusk
What a pleasure to watch these poets’ minds at work, guiding us this way and that.
– Billy Collins
‘… delightful, lively send-up … A vivid imagination is at play here, and a fine frenzy is the result.’ – Billy Collins
‘… laying frames of scenic detail to compose a lyric collage … enticing … resonates compellingly. … explosive off-screen drama arises through subtly-selected detail. Sharp, clever, economical, tongue-in-cheek.’ – Tracey Slaughter
Brave stories of danger and heart and sincerity.
Some risk everything outright, some are desperately quiet, but their intensity lies in what is unsaid and off the page.
These are brilliant pieces from bright, new voices.
A thrill to read.
~ Emily Ruskovich
I could see great stretches of imagination. I saw experimentation. I saw novelty with voice and style. I saw sentences that embraced both meaning and music. ~ Colum McCann
MoreThese glorious pieces have spun across the globe – pit-stopping in Japan, the Aussie outback, Vancouver, Paris, Amsterdam and our own Hibernian shores – traversing times past, present and imagined future as deftly as they mine the secret tunnels of the human heart. Enjoy the cavalcade. – Mia Gallagher
MoreThe standard is high, in terms of the emotional impact these writers managed to wring from just a few pages. – Billy O’Callaghan
Loop-de-loopy, fizz, and dazzle … unique and compelling—compressed, expansive, and surprising. – Sherrie Flick
Every page oozes with a sense of place and time. – Marti Leimbach
Energetic, dense with detail … engages us in the act of seeing, reminds us that attention is itself a form of praise. – Ellen Bass
MoreDead Souls has the magic surplus of meaning that characterises fine examples of the form – Neel Mukherjee
I was looking for terrific writing of course – something Fish attracts in spades, and I was richly rewarded right across the spectrum – Vanessa Gebbie
Really excellent – skilfully woven – Chris Stewart
Remarkable – Jo Shapcott
The practitioners of the art of brevity and super-brevity whose work is in this book have mastered the skills and distilled and double-distilled their work like the finest whiskey.
More€12 (incl. p&p) Sunrise Sunset by Tina Pisco Read Irish Times review by Claire Looby Surreal, sad, zany, funny, Tina Pisco’s stories are drawn from gritty experience as much as the swirling clouds of the imagination. An astute, empathetic, sometimes savage observer, she brings her characters to life. They dance themselves onto the pages, […]
MoreHow do we transform personal experience of pain into literature? How do we create and then chisel away at those images of others, of loss, of suffering, of unspeakable helplessness so that they become works of art that aim for a shared humanity? The pieces selected here seem to prompt all these questions and the best of them offer some great answers.
– Carmen Bugan.
What a high standard all round – of craft, imagination and originality: and what a wide range of feeling and vision.
Ruth Padel
I was struck by how funny many of the stories are, several of them joyously so – they are madcap and eccentric and great fun. Others – despite restrained and elegant prose – managed to be devastating. All of them are the work of writers with talent.
Claire Kilroy
The writing comes first, the bottom line comes last. And sandwiched between is an eye for the innovative, the inventive and the extraordinary.
MoreA new collection from around the globe: innovative, exciting, invigorating work from the writers and poets who will be making waves for some time to come. David Mitchell, Michael Collins, David Shields and Billy Collins selected the stories, flash fiction, memoirs and poems in this anthology.
MoreReading the one page stories I was a little dazzled, and disappointed that I couldn’t give the prize to everybody. It’s such a tight format, every word must count, every punctuation mark. ‘The Long Wet Grass’ is a masterly bit of story telling … I still can’t get it out of my mind.
– Chris Stewart
The perfectly achieved story transcends the limitations of space with profundity and insight. What I look for in fiction, of whatever length, is authenticity and intensity of feeling. I demand to be moved, to be transported, to be introduced into other lives. The stories I have selected for this anthology have managed this. – Ronan Bennett, Short Story Judge.
MoreI sing those who are published here – they have done a very fine job. It is difficult to create from dust, which is what writers do. It is an honour to have read your work. – Colum McCann
MoreThe entries into this year’s Fish Short Story Prize were universally strong. From these the judges have selected winners, we believe, of exceptional virtue. – Carlo Gebler
MoreI was amazed and delighted at the range and quality of these stories. Every one of them was interesting, well-written, beautifully crafted and, as a short-story must, every one of them focused my attention on that very curtailed tableau which a short-story necessarily sets before us. – Michael Collins
MoreThese stories voice all that is vibrant about the form. – Gerard Donovan. Very short stories pack a poetic punch. Each of these holds its own surprise, or two. Dive into these seemingly small worlds. You’ll come up anew. – Angela Jane Fountas
MoreEach of the pieces here has been chosen for its excellence. They are a delightfully varied assortment. More than usual for an anthology, this is a compendium of all the different ways that fiction can succeed. I invite you to turn to ‘All the King’s Horses’. The past is here. Begin.
– Michel Faber
Literary anthologies, especially of new work, act as a kind of indicator to a society’s concerns. This Short Story collection, such a sharp and useful enterprise, goes beyond that. Its internationality demonstrates how our concerns are held in common across the globe. – Frank Delaney
MoreFrom the daily routine of a career in ‘Spoonface’, to the powerful, recurring image of a freezer in ‘Shadow Lives’. It was the remarkable focus on the ordinary that made these Fish short stories such a pleasure to read. – Hugo Hamilton
MoreIn a world where twenty screens of bullshit seem to be revolving without respite … there is nothing that can surpass the ‘explosion of art’ and its obstinate insistence on making sense of things. These dedicated scribes, as though some secret society, heroically, humbly, are espousing a noble cause.
– Pat McCabe
It’s supposed to be a short form, the good story, but it has about it a largeness I love. There is something to admire in all these tales, these strange, insistent invention. They take place in a rich and satisfying mixture of places, countries of the mind and heart. – Christopher Hope
MoreThere are fine stories in this new anthology, some small and intimate, some reaching out through the personal for a wider, more universal perspective, wishing to tell a story – grand, simple, complex or everyday, wishing to engage you the reader. – Kate O’Riodan
MoreI feel like issuing a health warning with this Fish Anthology these stories may seriously damage your outlook – Here the writers view the world in their unique way, and have the imagination, talent, and the courage to refine it into that most surprising of all art forms the short story. – Clem Cairns.
MoreEvery story in this book makes its own original way in the world. knowing which are the telling moments, and showing them to us. And as the narrator of the winning story casually remarks, ‘Sometimes its the small things that amaze me’ – Molly McCloskey
MoreThe stories here possess the difference, the quirkiness and the spark. They follow their own road and their own ideas their own way. It is a valuable quality which makes this collection a varied one. Read it, I hope you say to yourself like I did on many occasions, ‘That’s deadly. How did they think of that?’ – Eamonn Sweeney
MoreReally good short stories like these, don’t read like they were written. They read like they simply grew on the page. – Joseph O’Connor
MoreThe writers in this collection can write short stories . . . their quality is the only thing they have in common. – Roddy Doyle
MoreThis is the first volume of short stories from Ireland’s newest publishing house. We are proud that fish has enabled 15 budding new writers be published in this anthology, and I look forward to seeing many of them in print again.
More12 Miles Out was selected by David Mitchell as the winner of the Fish Unpublished Novel Award.
A love story, thriller and historical novel; funny and sad, uplifting and enlightening.
You only know who you can’t trust. You can’t trust the law, because there’s none in New Ireland. You can’t trust the Church, because they think they’re the law. And you can’t trust the State, because they think they’re the Church And most of all, you can’t trust your friends, because you can’t remember who they were anymore.
MoreA memoir of urban life, chronicled through its central character, Mackey. From momentary reflections to stories about his break with childhood and adolescence, the early introduction to the Big World, the discovery of romance and then love, the powerlessness of ordinary people, the weaknesses that end in disappointment and the strengths that help them seek redemption and belonging.
MoreIan Wild’s stories mix Monty Python with Hammer Horror, and the Beatles with Shakespeare, but his anarchic style and sense of humour remain very much his own in this collection of tall tales from another planet. Where else would you find vengeful organs, the inside story of Eleanor Rigby, mobile moustaches, and Vikings looting a Cork City branch of Abracababra?
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