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IRON MOUNTAIN 2026

INTRODUCTION

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A rich blend of new writing, challenging perspectives on contemporary society and the brilliant voices of poet Paul Muldoon, novelist David Park, actor Carrie Crowley and singer Cathy Jordan are all in the mix at this year’s Iron Mountain Literature Festival, which will take place over the weekend of October 2-4 in Carrick-on-Shannon and its hinterlands.


Guests at the festival include Professor Frank Shovlin, whose biography of John McGahern will be published in October; new editions of five McGahern books (‘Amongst Women’, ‘The Barracks’, ‘The Leavetaking’, ‘The Pornographer’ and ‘Creatures of the Earth: Stories’) will be launched over the weekend and the winner of the 2026 John McGahern literary award will be announced on the Saturday evening. Actor Carrie Crowley will read from John McGahern’s work on Saturday night.


Exciting new voices in Irish writing at the 2026 Iron Mountain Literature Festival include poet Nithy Kasa, originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo and novelist and poet Jessamine O’Connor, whose debut  novel ‘Somewhere’ was published by the Lilliput Press in May. The festival also features another powerful new poet of witness and questing, the young Palestinian poet Fatena Abu Mustafa from Gaza who has been living and studying in Galway since August of last year.


Orlaith McBride, Director of the National Archives, Ireland will discuss ‘The Story of Us: Independent Ireland and the 1926 Census’, the book she edited with John Gibney to coincide with the release of the 1926 Census returns to the public in April of this year. Musician and distinguished writer on Irish traditional music Fintan Vallely will consider the renaissance in traditional music and song in the century since that census was taken and discuss some of his work, including the brilliant ‘Companion to Irish Traditional Music’ and the book ‘Beating Time – The Story of the Irish Drum’ on the origins of the bodhrán in Ireland.


The issue of racism and anti-migrant prejudice in Ireland will be addressed by writer and activist Leon Diop, co-founder of the advocacy, community and educational group Black and Irish, who will read from his recently-published memoir ‘Mixed Up: An Irish Boy’s Journey into Belonging’ about growing up as ‘a brown kid’ in Tallaght. 


The living bond between literature and history will be considered by Greek Cypriot writer Nasia Dionysiou who works in the offices of the Commissioner for Human Rights in Cyprus. Her most recent novel, ‘What is a Camp’ is a literary exploration of the history of the Famagusta detention camps set up by the British in 1946 to detain Jewish refugees on their way to Palestine. In considering how history informs literature, Dionysiou sometimes quotes Albert Camus, who wrote that ‘the world’s reality is our common homeland’.


David Park, described by Roddy Doyle as ‘one of Ireland’s great novelists’, is the author of ten novels, a novella and two collections of short stories. ‘The Truth Commissioner’ was awarded the Christopher Ewart-Biggs Memorial Prize and ‘The Light of Amsterdam’ was shortlisted for the International Dublin Literary Award. His most recent novel, ‘Ghost Wedding’ was published last year. David Park will read from his work and discuss his writing on the opening night of The Iron Mountain Literature Festival.


A highlight of the festival is the Saturday night reading by Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and former Ireland Professor of Poetry, Paul Muldoon, who will present his remarkable illustrated lecture ‘A History of Ireland in 12 Poems’. Muldoon is one of the outstanding poets or our time, original, provocative and engaging, and here he surveys Irish history through the prism of his poetry, taking the audience on a journey from early history to the present day.


As usual, The Iron Mountain Literature Festival will coincide with the Ballinaglera Traditional Music Weekend and present The Iron Mountain Session of Words and Music. Guests will include Fintan Vallely and the novelist and short story writer Evelyn Conlon.

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