INOTE 23
A report on the 2023 conference of INOTE, the Irish National Organisation for Teachers of English.
Read MoreGabriel Josipovici’s commentary in Hamlet: Fold on Fold is consistently stimulating and thought-provoking, and blessedly free of academic jargon.
Read MoreJason Allen-Paisant’s Self-Portrait as Othello is a thought-provoking collection of poems.
Read MoreThe argument for the most ‘important’ subject in school being … poetry.
Read MoreWilliam Wall’s latest novel, Empty Bed Blues, is the story of an Irishwoman whose life has been torn apart by her husband’s betrayals . A small town in Liguria in Northern Italy helps her see how she might live again.
Read MoreThe second edition of the RSC Shakespeare Complete Works edited by Jonathan Bate and Eric Rasmussen is well-worth buying.
Read MoreMartha Dickinson Bianchi’s Emily Dickinson: Face to Face is a brilliant evocation of her aunt’s life next door in Amherst, Massachusetts.
Read MoreThe authors in Kate Jones’s selection of essays looking at the basics of cognitive science explain key concepts in a valuably accessible way.
Read MoreRos Atkins’s The Art of Explanation: how to communicate with clarity and confidence is a fascinating fine-grained account of how he has reached the status of one of broadcasting’s most impressive ‘explainers’.
Read MoreIdeas for the use of a Ros Atkins ‘explainer’ in English class.
Read MoreSome comments on the recent NCCA ‘Report on the role of prescribed text lists in Junior Cycle and Leaving Certificate English and the processes involved in text selection.’
Read MoreDeborah Levy’s new novel August Blue will give pleasure to all who enjoyed her superb three-book ‘living autobiography.’
Read MorePerspectives on the Teaching of English in Post-Primary Education, edited by Kevin Cahill and Niamh Dennehy, is a comprehensive and valuable collection of essays on the way the subject is taught and studied in Ireland.
Read MoreGreg Ashman’s Cognitive Load Theory in the Little Guide for Teachers series is a lucid short book on this important idea.
Read MoreAlice Winn’s début novel In Memoriam is a fast-paced revisiting of the First World War in fiction, this time concentrating on a highly-charged erotic relationship between two schoolfriends, Ellwood and Gaunt.
Read MoreAn analysis of William Trevor’s short story, ‘The Piano Tuner’s Wives’, a masterpiece of fiction.
Read MoreClaire Keegan’s 2022 short story ‘So Late in the Day’ is further evidence of her excellence, and George Saunders talks about it brilliantly.
Read MoreAn article on Beaver Island in Lake Michigan.
Read MoreA round-up of short reviews from the Fortnightly newsletter, from January to June 2023.
Read MoreKevin Curran’s new novel Youth captures four teenagers in contemporary Balbriggan, on the cusp of adulthood.
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