One of Northern Ireland's finest writers and broadcasters, and the author of a string of novels (including December Bride), Bell was also a pioneering radio broadcaster, an incisive cultural commentator, and a committed regionalist. This is a selection of Bell's most important and personal writings, and includes radio play scripts, essays and articles, as well as photographs and extracts from his unpublished diaries. Published to mark the centenary of his birth, this book celebrates Bell's remarkable contribution to regional culture and provides a fascinating portrait of a man whose vision and work have created a lasting legacy.
Sam Potter's funny, heartfelt and compelling one-woman play asks what family means in a modern society, delicately weaving in questions of racial identity, economic privilege, and the lottery of birth.
E. J. Rath was the pen name of Chauncey Brainerd and his wife Edith Rathbone Jacobs Brainerd (1885-1922), both American writers. Many of their novels were adapted for stage or film, and include "Once Again," "The Nervous Wreck" and others.
The British were indeed worried. An extraordinary number of prominent British citizens were dying around the world in appalling and intriguing circumstances. Of greater concern was the tightly guarded knowledge that they were all latent or overt homosexuals. While evidence of this was bound to come to light in each individual case, no one outside the highest government, intelligence and police circles in London knew that each murder could be linked by a common thread... one man's campaign for revenge.
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