Theo Dorgan

Theo Dorgan’s most recent work includes the anthology A Book of Uncommon Prayer, and What This Earth Costs Us, a re-issue in one volume of his first two collections. A new collection, Greek, will be published by Dedalus Press in February 2010.

Therese Cox

Therese Cox was born in Chicago and lives in Brooklyn. Her work has appeared in The Brooklyn Rail, gorse, and Banshee. She is pursuing a PhD in English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University.

Thomas Lynch

Thomas Lynch is the author of three collections of poems, three of essays. His first book of fictions will be published in 2010. Another collection of poems is forthcoming. He lives in Michigan and West Clare.

Succat

Succat: Keats and Chapman are characters created by Myles na gCopaleen used mostly in his Irish Times column, Cruiskeen Lawn. This new piece by Succat is a tug of the forelock in the direction of l’altissimo poeta.

Sue Ann Alderson

Sue Ann Alderson teaches in the Creative Writing Program at the University of British Columbia. Her poems have been published in The Antigonish Review, The Antioch Review, West Coast Review and New West Writing.

Susan Clegg

Susan Clegg lives in London and is a member of the Three Johns Azzuri writing group. She is currently working on a novel and a collection of short stories.

Susan Em

Susan Em took first prize in the short story category of this year’s GCN/Smirnoff Black Queer Writes Award. She has written a novel for children and a novel for adults and is currently finishing a screenplay. She works as an archivist in Belfast.

Susan Knight

Susan Knight is a writer and critic, author of two novels, The Invisible Woman and Grimaldi’s Garden, and a work of non-fiction entitled Where the Grass is Greener: Voices of Immigrant Women in Ireland. On a recent holiday to Cuba, she strayed on to the Hemingway trail, ‘For Ever and Ever’ is, nevertheless, neither about Hemingway nor about Gregorio Fuentes, who is said to have inspired The Old Man and the Sea, but a work purely of the imagination.

Susan Lanigan

Susan Lanigan formerly worked in the IT industry and is currently completing a Masters in Writing at NUI Galway. She wrote, produced and directed her play Sister Nobody for the Muscailt Festival in February and has had poetry published in Electric Acom.

Susan Millar DuMars

Susan Millar DuMars’ debut collection of short stories, Lights In The Distance, was published in 2010 by Doire Press (www.doirepress.com). She has been the recipient of an Arts Council bursary for her fiction. Susan has also published two poetry collections with Salmon. ‘The Observences’ won the 2016 Seamus Heaney Prize.

Susan Tomaselli

Susan Tomaselli is editor of gorse, the literary journal. She has written for the Guardian, Bookmunch, CultureNI and has contributed to Little Black Book of Books (Cassell, 2007) and The Beat Anthology (Blackheath Books, 2010). She currently lives in Dublin.

Susanne Cummings

Susanne Cummings was born in Dublin. She is an Electronic Engineer and is currently studying for a Masters at UCD. This is her first published poem.

Susanne Ringell

Susanne Ringell, a Finland-Swedish writer, was born in Helsinki in 1955 and is a prize-winning author, poet and dramatist. Her first collection of short stories appeared in 1993. She has won the Swedish Literary Association in Finland’s prize three times: for Katt begraven (Buried Cat) in 2004, published in French translation 2006 as Chat enterré, and most recently for Vattnen (The Waters), her ninth book, published in 2010. Vattnen was also awarded the Finnish Broadcasting Company Yle’s literature prize, with the citation: ‘every word is polished to perfection and every single meaning is loaded.’

Susanne Stich

Susanne Stich is originally from Nürnberg, living in the Northwest of Ireland. Her writing appeared in Ambit, The Incubator, The Impressment Gang, and many other literary magazines. She is also a regular contributor to The Honest Ulsterman.

Suzanne Power

Suzanne Power’s novels have sold rights to territories worldwide. Her two most recent books were non-fiction. This year she has produced short stories and poetry which have been published in various collections. ‘Pilgrimage’ was written as an outcome of the Coracle International Writers’ professional development residency. This residency was part funded by the European Regional Development Fund through the Ireland Wales Interreg 4a programme. www.coracle.eu.com

Synne Johnsson

Synne Johnsson is a Norwegian writer, currently studying creative writing and journalism at Kingston University. She is inspired by the Norwegian author Knut Hamsun and Frank O’Hara. Her work has appeared in Kingston University’s student anthology, Ripple.

Tadhg Coakley

Tadhg Coakley is a writer from Cork. His debut novel, The First Sunday in September, was published by The Mercier Press in 2018. He has just completed a crime novel set in Cork city and is currently working on a book of essays about his lifelong intimacy with sport.

Tadhg Russell

Tadhg Russell lives in Doneraile, North Cork and has been writing poetry for the last number of years. His work has been published by Southword, Cyphers, New Irish Writing, Crannog, Poetry Ireland Review, The Stony Thursday Book, West47, Atlanta Review (USA) and Solas Nua (USA). He was on the shortlist for The Patrick Kavanagh Award in 2010 and took second prize in the Gregory O’Donoghue Poetry Competition in 2011. He was featured poet in The Stinging Fly winter issue 2012-13. His short stories have appeared in the Cork Evening Echo.

Tahar Ben Jelloun

Winner of the prix Goncourt, the IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and the prix Maghreb, Tahar Ben Jelloun was born in Morocco and emigrated to France in 1961. He is a regular contributor to Le Monde and has written more than thirty novels, including The Sacred Night, The Sand Child, Corruption, This Blinding Absence of Light, Leaving Tangier and others. Ben Jelloun’s prose is at once lyrical, poetic and rich in fairy tale, imagery, metaphor and symbolism.

Siobhan Campbell

Siobhan Campbell’s fourth poetry collection is Heat Signature (Seren, 2017) which follows Cross Talk and the Templar award-winning That Water Speaks in Tongues. Co-editor of Eavan Boland: Inside History (Arlen/Syracuse), she received the Oxford Brookes International Poetry Prize in 2016.

Siobhán McGibbon

Siobhán McGibbon is a visual artist interested in the intersections between art
and science. Her practice explores the ‘The modern Prometheus’ through a series
of investigations in sectors of medical exploration.

SJ Mannion

SJ Mannion is a Dubliner living in Christchurch, New Zealand. She has previously published work in The Prole and The Moth. She is married, with three children, and is desperately doing domesticity.

Sonya Gildea

Sonya Gildea was born in Cork and now lives in Dublin. She is writing the poetry collection, Fragments; the short story collection, Heartscapes; and her debut novel, Tenderness. She has also received a number of awards for screenwriting.

Sophie Mackintosh

Sophie Mackintosh’s fiction has appeared in Granta and TANK, and she was the winner of the 2016 White Review Short Story Prize. Her debut novel, The Water Cure, is published by Hamish Hamilton.

Stefani Tran

Stefani Tran is a Vietnamese-Filipino writer, currently in the MPhil in Creative Writing programme at Trinity College Dublin. She’s concealed her heart beneath your floorboards, and its ceaseless beating will haunt you. Deal with it. Find her online at stefanitran.weebly.com.

Stephanie C. Molloy

Stephanie C. Molloy was born in Dublin in 1989. Childhood summers were spent in Clonakilty, West Cork, where her grandmother was born. In 2011 she graduated from UCD in Archaeology. In 2012 she was accepted to the University of Ulster, Belfast, where she will continue to write.

Stephanie Papa

Stephanie Papa is a poet and translator living Paris, France. She has an MFA degree in Poetry from the Pan European programme. She is poetry co-editor of Paris Lit Up. Her work has been published in World Literature Today, Niche, Yasakmeyve, NOON, great weather for media, Four Chambers Press, Paris/Atlantic, Literary Bohemian, Rumpus, and more. She organises writing workshops and readings in Paris.

Stephen Devereux

Stephen Devereux grew up in Suffolk and was a factory and farm worker before going to UEA as a mature student. He has taught and lectured in the North West and has published critical essays, short stories and poetry in British, Irish, American and Austrian journal and magazines.

Stephen Kennedy

Stephen Kennedy is from Drogheda, County Louth. He had a poem in Issue Two of this magazine and his short fiction has appeared in Books Ireland.