
Recipes & Customs for Today's Kitchen
Ireland (IE) · Books
Books for Ireland (IE).

Recipes & Customs for Today's Kitchen

Features 300 traditional dishes and 100 recipes.

Room is a tale at once shocking, riveting, exhilarating — a story of unconquerable love in harrowing circumstances, and of the diamond-hard bond between a mother and her child.

In Irish Folk and Fairy Tales William Butler Yeats delivers a vast collection of stories, songs, and poetry of his home country and beloved Ireland’s historical and legendary past.

Angela’s Ashes is Frank McCourt’s masterful memoir of his childhood in Ireland—now with a new introduction by Patrick Radden Keefe.

The Picture of Dorian Gray offers a disturbing portrait of an individual coming face to face with the reality of his soul.

Told with ferocious energy and sly, wicked humor, Milkman establishes Anna Burns as one of the most consequential voices of our day.

Winner of the Booker Prize – Roddy Doyle’s witty, exuberant novel about a young boy trying to make sense of his changing world.

The Gathering is a daring, witty, and insightful family epic, clarified through Anne Enright’s unblinking eye.

With lyrical prose balancing the stark realities of the hunter and the hunted, Red Sky in Morning is a visceral and meditative novel that marks the debut of a stunning new talent.

A hilarious and satirical debut novel exploring religious hypocrisy in an Irish secondary school.

From the author of THE BEE STING, a New York Times Top 10 Best Books of the Year and shortlisted for the 2023 Booker Prize.

A searing, surreal novel that blends fantasy and reality—and Beatles fandom—from one of literature’s most striking contemporary voices, author of the international sensation City of Bohane

Winner of the 2005 Booker Prize

The Spinning Heart speaks for contemporary Ireland like no other novel.

A masterpiece of black humour from the renown comic and acclaimed author of ‘At Swim-Two-Birds’ – Flann O’Brien.

Praised as “a work of wild, vaulting ambition and achievement” by Entertainment Weekly, Jamie O’Neill’s first novel invites comparison to such literary greats as James Joyce, Samuel Beckett and Charles Dickens.

First published in 1897, "Bram Stoker's Dracula" established the ground rules for virtually all vampire fiction written in its wake.

Waiting for Godot has become of the most important and enigmatic plays of the past fifty years and a cornerstone of twentieth-century drama.

Written with disarming simplicity and careful attention to detail, this classic is diverse in its appeal: for children, it remains an enchanting fantasy