‘Writing in my notebook, smiling, it was my deathly flaw – vanity, delinquent self-regard. The space between us became tense, almost material, and I got up and sat at a separate table’
In the spring issue of the Dublin Review, Maggie Armstrong’s ‘A Critic at Large’ tells the story of a young woman, ‘very much in love’ with her much older boyfriend, travelling with him around the United States for a summer month. It is a vivid, hilarious and at times harrowing portrait of the blindness a bad relationship can create.
Also in the new Dublin Review: Jessica Traynor brings us to the dark psychological territories she visited in early motherhood; Ian Sansom weathers the pandemic in his parents’ garage; and short stories by Nathan Dunne, Dean Fee and David Ralph.
From the Archive
The Dublin Review Podcast

The best Irish and International writers of fiction and non-fiction discuss and read from their work that has been published in The Dublin Review.