|
|
Writers: Subscribe and send
in your brief bio and your best writing sample (up to 1200 words
total) to
apply
to become a
featured
writer. Find free articles and markets to help you get
published. Readers: Find your favorite authors, anthologies,
and other books.
Editors,
send in your calls for manuscripts. Find writers and manuscripts
to fill your anthologies.
This
website is best viewed in IE
|
|
|
|
|


/_derived/Amy_Lou_Jenkins_htm_cmp_blank110_vbtn.gif)
/_derived/Writers%20Wanted_htm_cmp_blank110_vbtn.gif)









/_derived/Featured_Writers_htm_cmp_blank110_vbtn.gif)
 |
Amy
Lou Jenkins is the award-winning author of
Every Natural Fact: Five Seasons of Open-Air Parenting
"If you combined the lyricism of Annie Dillard, the vision of
Aldo Leopold, and the gentle but tough-minded optimism of Frank
McCourt, you might come close to Amy Lou Jenkins.Tom Bissell
author of The Father of All Things
"Sentence by sentence, a joy to
read." —
Phillip Lopate , Author of
Waterfront

|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Anthologies online participates in various affiliate programs and most links
to books and products in articles/anthologies/author or any page offer some
referral payment, pay for click or other reimbursement. The payment is
generally pennies per click or purchase. Anthologies online also runs paid ads.The
Anthologiesonline web site and newsletter are provided on an "as is" basis
without any warranties of any kind and disclaim all warranties, including
the warranty
of merchantability, non-infringement of third parties' rights, and the
warranty
of fitness for particular purpose. No person or organization makes any
warranties about the accuracy, reliability, completeness, or timeliness of
the material, services, software text, graphics and links. Any communication is generally considered to be
nonconfidential. See
Privacy Policy.
|
|
|
|
| |
Irish
Anthologies, Irish Stories
Featured Anthologies
Irish Stories
| |
Including original stories by Neil Jordan, Gerard Donovan,
Edna O'Brien, Roddy Doyle, Colum McCann, Claire Keegan, Colm Toibin, Niall
Williams, and Mary Morrissy, this stunning collection of short stories
illustrates the vibrancy and eclecticism of contemporary Irish writing. In
Roddy Doyle's The Joke, a middle-aged man sits eavesdropping on his wife's
conversation with a friend, at once bitter and sweetly yearning; in Sophia
Hillan's The Cocktail Hour, a couple wander the night haunted and lost in a
reverie of the Jazz Age; in Bernard MacLaverty's Matters of Life and Death,
two young brothers spend the night at the house of the local doctor and his
wife, and together the four of them end up in a revelrous late night dance.
From Ireland to the United States, rural Peru to the mountains of the
Himalayas, these pieces collectively and individually demonstrate the
complexity of emotion and memory that is associated with the very finest
short stories, and bears testimony to the fact that the form is still alive
and flourishing. |
| |
Explore what it means to be Irish with this compelling and
uncommon collection of stories.
Featuring both famous authors and forgotten ones, these twenty literary gems
offer a colorful kaleidoscope of perspectives on the Irish people and their
character. Here are stories of daring patriots and reluctant warriors,
magical musicians and young lovers, conniving landlords and hearty peasants,
greenhorn immigrants and longtime transplants with an undying love of the
old country. From the hills of Connemara to the streets of New York and the
deserts of North Africa, these stories bring to light the odyssey of the
intrepid Irish. They are sure to inspire, entertain, and enlighten-or at the
very least, make you smile.
With works from:
Liam O'Flaherty, Arthur Conan Doyle, William Butler Yeats, Sarah Orne
Jewett, George Moore, Frank Mathew, Samuel Lover, Bram Stoker, Katharine
Tynan, Ellis N. Myles, Finley Peter Dunne, T. Crofton Croker, William
Larminie, Lady Gregory, William M. Thackeray, Alexander Young, John McElgun,
George A. Birmingham, Kate Douglas Wiggin
|
Emerald Magic : Great Tales of Irish Fantasy
Mythology and magic come alive in this collection of Irish fantasy stories by
some of today's finest authors.
Ireland is a nation that holds fast to its history and
heritage, and nowhere is that more true than in its folktales and legends. From
the great Celtic myths featuring the bard
Taliesin,
the terrible Morrigan, the heroic Cuchulain, or the noble and cunning Sidhe to
strange and mysterious tales of today, the stories and traditions of the Emerald
Isle hold a strong attraction for many. Stories are told in cottage hearths from
Galway to Dublin, and from the windblown rocky Cliffs of Mohr to the seaside
villages where fishing boats still roam the oceans. Tall tales and town stories
are as much a way of life as a pint and good conversation at the local pub.
Emerald Magic brings together today's best fantasy authors to
explore the myths of the Irish, telling their own versions of these ancient
tales of luck, love, and honor, or drawing upon centuries of Irish myths and
folktales and updating them into brand-new stories. Edited and with an
introduction by bestselling author Father Andrew M. Greeley, Emerald Magic
contains fourteen wonderful stories of legend and lore, including:
"A Woman Is a Fast Moving Picnic" by
Ray Bradbury. A group of
pub regulars set out to discover the truth behind a local song and answer
that age-old question: Just how fast does a person sink in a bog?
"The Isle of Women" by
Jacqueline Carey. In an age long ago,
a warrior sailing for vengeance happens upon an island ruled by a
woman like no
other. But if he is to continue his quest, he must
choose between her and his
duty.
"Speir-Bhan" by
Tanith Lee. A woman who finds and reads her grandfather's diary
unleashes the specter of an old debt that, even in today's modern age, must be
paid---one way or the other.
"A Drop of Something Special in the Blood" by
Fred Saberhagen.
In the late eighteenth century, an Irish author encounters a being that he will
turn into his greatest literary creation.
"The Cat with No Name" by
Morgan Llywelyn. A lonely girl
neglected by her parents finds an unexpected friend in the alley behind her
home---one that may be more than it first seems.
"The Butter-Spirit's Tithe" by
Charles de Lint. Even in twenty-first-century
America, it is still not wise to anger the spirits of the world, as a young
musician discovers when a butter-spirit who had cursed him nine years earlier
comes to claim his soul.
"Land of Heart's Desire" by
Elizabeth Haydon. A young man discovers the magical
truth about his parents' marriage, and sets a chain of events in motion that
will force him to choose between the life he has always known---and another life
he could have.
"The Swan Pilot" by
L. E. Modesitt, Jr. In the far future, spaceship pilots
travel through interdimensional portals from planet to planet---and the only
thing more important than knowing how to fly is knowing how to handle the
strange hallucinations that appear during the journey.
Filled with the spirit and magic of the stories of Ireland, Emerald Magic is a
collection of fantasy stories that will delight and captivate from the first
page to the last.
About the
Author:
A native
of Chicago, Reverend Andrew M. Greeley, is a priest, distinguished
sociologist and bestselling author. He is professor of social sciences at the
University of Chicago and the University of Arizona, as well as Research
Associate at the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago.
His current sociological research focuses on current issues facing the Catholic
Church-including celibacy of priests, ordination of women, religious
imagination, and sexual behavior of Catholics.
Father Greeley received the S.T.L. in 1954 from St. Mary of Lake Seminary. His
graduate work was done at the University of Chicago, where he received the M.A.
Degree in 1961 and the Ph.D. in 1962.
Father Greeley has written scores of books and hundreds of popular and scholarly
articles on a variety of issues in sociology, education and religion. His column
on political, church and social issues is carried by the carried by the
Chicago Sun Times and may other newspapers. He stimulates discussion of
neglected issues and often anticipates sociological trends. He is the author of
more than thirty bestselling novels and an autobiography, Furthermore!:
Confessions of a Parish Priest.
More
Irish Anthologies

|