America on the verge of isolationism? Expect another small war quite soon
US Politics: It takes superhuman discipline to possess awesome power without using it
US Politics: It takes superhuman discipline to possess awesome power without using it
Do ideas embraced by some writers in the past mean we should stop reading them?
The man-made channel has enabled marine life to migrate from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean
The French Connection won best picture but the non-fiction novel is largely forgotten
Cartier-Bresson, Dorothea Lange and Robert Cresswell caught Irish life in the 1950s
The artist’s work is visceral yet beautiful, as a major new show in Paris makes clear
Winning fragrances from Byredo, Timothy Han/Edition, Chanel and Jo Malone
Francis Ford Coppola’s disaster-struck Vietnam epic has had yet another recut
Few directors have made so many films that touch on the status of masterpiece
William Melville created the blueprint for the popular culture spy we know today
John Gray explores fixed idea, unquestioning atheism in his new book Seven Types of Atheism
‘Most of the books we sell are to Ireland but the more expensive books tend to go abroad’
Former BBC foreign correspondent expresses concern over ‘celebrification’ of news agenda’
Putin’s macho authoritarianism, disdain for press, and mockery of truth has installed itself in Trump’s America
On the centenary of his tragic execution, it is worth recalling the rebel’s adventurous life
The theatre company’s latest show explores the legacy of the Manchester bombing
Michael Dervan: Two evenings of music and words as part of Ireland 2016 got me thinking about the links that were missed
For their collaboration commemorating the Rising at the NCH, Colm Tóibín and Donnacha Dennehy have focused on the uneasy time when Casement and Conrad shared quarters in the Belgian colony
Interview: The Bosnian-American writer’s new novel is a comedy with tragedy at its heart: the main characters have all been destroyed by state-sponsored conflicts
This darkly funny debut novel from a former Dublin mortician offers a unique perspective on dying
For Africa Day, Eileen Battersby selects 13 classic novels set in Africa but written by outsiders, including several Irish authors
Spy thriller is a labour of loyalty to the underrated and original Johnson
A fresh insight into Mr Blythe’s economic stewardship has been highlighted by the discovery of a rare copy of Dracula “as Gaeilge”
The journalist may be 66 and less gonzo than before, but rage still fuels his cutting-edge prose
Colombian writer takes the €100,000 prize for The Sound of Things Falling
Richard Mosse’s dispatches from Congo, in ‘The Enclave’ at the Royal Hibernian Academy, dispense with familiar styles of war-zone reportage to show life in the raw
Being in college means being in the know about all things music, art, film, food and politics, so here’s a cheatsheet to start you off
Crosswords & puzzles to keep you challenged and entertained
Inquests into the nightclub fire that led to the deaths of 48 people
How does a post-Brexit world shape the identity and relationship of these islands
Weddings, Births, Deaths and other family notices