Neha Margosa writes and lives in Bangalore, India. Neha’s non-fiction has appeared in The Toast and The Caravan, and their fiction has previously appeared in Out of Print.
Neil Banks
Neil Banks lives in County Wicklow. His stories and poems have featured in The Stinging Fly, New Irish Writing, Crannóg, The Shot Glass Journal, Burning Bush 2 and on RTÉ Radio
Neil Bedford
Neil Bedford was born in Birmingham. He lectures in Electronics at the Institute of Technology, Tralee. His short stories and poems have been published in magazines in Ireland, England, Wales and the USA.
Neil Hegarty
Neil Hegarty’s novels include The Jewel (2019); and Inch Levels, which was shortlisted for the Irish Novel of the Year award in 2017. He is co-editor with Nora Hickey M’Sichili of Impermanence (2022).
Nell Regan
Nell Regan lives and works in Dublin. She is currently finishing a biography of Helena Molony, Irish nationalist and trade unionist, for a book of biographies to be published next year by Cork University Press. Her poems have appeared in Books Ireland and Force I0.
Nessa O’Mahony
Nessa O’Mahony was born in Dublin and lives in Rathfarnham where she works as a freelance teacher and writer. She has published three books: her first collection, Bar Talk, appeared in 1999; her second, Trapping a Ghost, was published in 2005; a verse novel, In Sight of Home, was published in 2009. A third collection, Her Father’s Daughter, is forthcoming from Salmon Poetry.
Niall McGrath
Niall McGrath is from County Antrim. He has had poetry and short fiction widely published internationally. He is editor of The Black Mountain Review.
Niamh Bagnell
Niamh Bagnell is a member of Lucan Writers’ Group. She has had a poem published in Dermot Bolger’s anthology, Night and Day, and has read at the Glór sessions, The Brown Bread Mix-Tape, The Irish Writers’ Centre and Nighthawks. She hosts a weekly writer based radio show on Liffey Sound. Her blog, variouscushions.blogspot.com, has received a nomination for The National Blog Awards.
Niamh Campbell
Niamh Campbell won the Sunday Audible Short Story Award in 2020 and the Rooney Prize in 2021. Her novels This Happy (2020) and We Were Young (2022) are published by Weidenfeld and Nicholson. She lives in County Clare.
Niamh Mac Alister
Niamh Mac Alister recently returned to Ireland after completing a Masters Degree in Creative Writing at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. She completed the degree with the generous assistance of The Arts Council. ‘Dusk’ was submitted as part of her dissertation.
Niamh Mulvey
Niamh Mulvey is a London-based writer, editor and writing coach from Kilkenny. She has previously been published by The Stinging Fly, Banshee, Southword, Little Atoms, the Irish Times, the Bookseller and Unherd. Her debut story collection, ‘Hearts and Bones: Love Songs for Late Youth’, will be published by Picador in June 2022. Her first novel, ‘The Amendments’ will be published in 2023.
Niamh Prior
Niamh Prior studied English with Film and TV Studies at Brunel University London, and later Creative Writing at UCC, where her postgraduate studies were funded by scholarships from UCC and from the Irish Research Council. Her poetry and fiction have been published in journals including Quarryman, Penny Dreadful and Southword. Her debut novel Catchlights is forthcoming with John Murray Originals in June 2022.
Nick Laird
Nick Laird was born in Country Tyrone in 1975. He is a poet, novelist and critic whose work has appeared in journals such as the London Review of Books, the TLS, The New Yorker and The New York Review of Books. He has published two collections of poetry, To A Fault and On Purpose, and two novels Utterly Monkey and Glover’s Mistake, and is the recipent of the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, a Somerset Maugham Award, the Irish Chair of Poetry Award, the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, the Betty Trask Prize and the Jerwood Aldeburgh Prize. He teaches at Barnard College, New York. A new collection, Go Giants, will be published next year.
Nicola Daly
Nicola Daly’s short stories have been published by the North West Arts Council, Notes From The Underground and in Honno Press Anthologies. She won third prize 2014 in the HISSAC short story competition and the Gatehouse Short Story Award.
Nicola Griffin
Nicki Griffin’s first collection, Unbelonging, was published by Salmon Poetry in 2013 and was shortlisted for the Shine/Strong Award 2014 for best debut collection. The Skipper and Her Mate (non-fiction) was published by New Island in 2013. She is co-editor of poetry newspaper Skylight 47.
Nicola Jennings
Nicola Jennings is married with three children. She has had poetry and short stories published in The Stinging Fly, Burren Meitheal, Ireland’s Own, Woman’s Way, The Waterford Review and Abbey Echoes One.
Nicolás Poblete
Nicolás Poblete is from Santiago, Chile, where he is a professor at the Universidad
Chileno-Británica de Cultura. He received his Masters and PhD from Washington
University in St. Louis, and has received a number of honors and awards for his
writing.
Michaële Cutaya
Michaële Cutaya is a writer, researcher and editor living in County Galway. She writes essays and reviews for Irish publications in print and online. She co-founded Fugitive Papers with James Merrigan in 2011. She is editor at CIRCA Art Magazine since 2016.
Michéal Donnellan
Michéal Donnellan has published short fiction, poetry and non-fiction in Cunga Magazine, Ropes and The Cúirt Annual. His web site and blog can be found at www.mickdonnellan.com.
Micheal O’Siadhail
Micheal O’Siadhail has published several poetry collections, his latest being Love Life (Bloodaxe, 2005).
Michele Vassal
Michele Vassal was born and reared in the French Alps and began writing in English three years ago. Her poems have appeared in various journals and she won the 1999 Listowel Writers Week. Salmon will publish her first collection next year.
Michelle Coyne
Michelle Gallen
Michelle Gallen was born in Country Tyrone in 1975. A fiction writer and poet, her work has been published in Irish and UK anthologies and magazines, including Mxlexia, Cyphers and QWF. She was awarded the Orange/NW Short Story Award 2005.
Mick Rainsford
Mick Rainsford has worked at all sorts of things and travelled fairly extensively. He has been published in The Sunday Tribune, Cúirt, Comhar, MeThree (USA) and Poetry Ireland Review. A regular contributor to Irish radio, he has been shortlisted for a PJ O’Connor Award and the Hennessy Emerging Fiction Award.
Miguel Dearce
Miguel Dearce was born in Spain in 1950. He moved to Ireland in 1978 and now works at Trinity College. He has published Campus Poems, available from TCD. His work has also appeared in the Susquehanna Quarterly, Electric Acorn and Riposte.
Mike Casey
Mike Casey has published a novel, a chap-book of short stories, and a considerable volume of poetry and short fiction, much of it award-winning. He contributes articles to the Irish Times.
Mike McCormack
Mike McCormack is the author of two collections of short stories and three novels. In 2016 Solar Bones won the Goldsmiths Prize and in 2018 it was awarded the International Dublin Literary Award. He is currently working on a collection of short stories and teaches creative writing at NUI Galway.
Mimmie Malaba
Mimmie Malaba is a 20-year-old spoken word poet. Biggest performances include the National Concert Hall in 2019 as part of This Land, a collaboration with singers, musicians, rappers, poets and performers recently arrived in Ireland, and at Electric Picnic in 2018 as part of KaleidSlam. She is currently studying Pre-Nursing.
Molia Dumbleton
Molia Dumbleton’s work has been awarded the Seán Ó Faoláin Story Prize, the Dromineer Literary Festival Flash Fiction Award, and the Columbia Journal Winter Fiction Award; and featured in literary journals including New England Review and The Kenyon Review online.
Molly Anders
Molly Anders is a Kentucky-born writer now living in London, England. She is the recipient of the Joyce Carol Oates Fiction Prize and fellowships from the Norman Mailer Center, the James Merrill House and the J. William Fulbright Commission. She holds a Masters in Fine Arts from Syracuse University.