the Dublin Review
Spring 2002
‘Sunday’, ‘Bloody Sunday’
Two new films about Bloody Sunday [review-essay]
A dash of colour
The iconography of the Troubles [review-essay]
Kavanagh’s threat
Two new biographies shed light on the significance of Patrick Kavanagh [review-essay]
Seven years in the Brothers
A Christian Brothers postulant, and teacher, recalls the order and his leaving of it [memoir]
‘She's live, she's modern .’
The life and relics of St Thérèse of Lisieux [essay]
They change the subject
A rent-boy's days and nights [fiction]
Scriptor ignotus, with the fire in him now
The poetry of Trevor Joyce [review-essay]
‘None of us likes it’
The peculiar position of the poet-critic [review-essay]

