THE DUBLIN REVIEW PODCAST
In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Eoin Butler about his essay We're not those kind of people, which appeared in
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Cathy Sweeney about her personal essay Relapse, which appeared in
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Juliana Adelman about her essay Weights and measures, which appeared in
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Neil Hegarty about his personal essay Gallet, which appeared in
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to William Keohane about his personal essay, Lake Ontario, which appeared in
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Catriona Crowe about her personal essay The View From Street Level, which appeared in
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Dean Fee about his personal essay The Other World, which appeared in
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Jessica Traynor about her personal essay Reset, which appeared in
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Glenn Patterson about his personal essay The wee boy who got him shot, which was published in The Dublin Review NUMBER 30 | SPRING 2008.
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In this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Maggie Armstrong about her short story A critic at large, which was published in The Dublin Review NUMBER 82 | SPRING 2021.
info_outlineIn this episode of The Dublin Review Podcast, Aingeala Flannery talks to Rob Doyle about a personal essay he wrote called Tastes good with the money, which was published in NUMBER 83 | SUMMER 2021. Rob Doyle is a novelist, short story writer and essayist from Dublin. His fiction debut Here Are the Young Men was published in 2014, this was followed by a short story collection This Is The Ritual in 2016. His third book Threshold was published in 2020. A collection of personal reflections on his favourite books Autobibliography came out late last year. Rob has been contributing to The Dublin Review since 2013.