This blog is a personal take on Listowel, Co. Kerry. I am writing for anyone anywhere with a Listowel connection but especially for sons and daughters of Listowel who find themselves far from home. Contact me at listowelconnection@gmail.com

Tag: Listowel Literary Festival 2025

As Far as Turn Back

A Listowel Backway

Learning the Lessons of History

Those who don’t learn from the mistakes of history are destined to repeat them.

The debate in Castleisland was short lived. They didn’t even have to resort to the Listowel solution to a Listowel problem. They are going to leave well enough alone. This time the people spoke in today’s forum for people who are unhappy with a proposal to let rip. Let rip they did. Some people wanted no change. Some people were okay with change but not to O’Connell. Various names were suggested until the whole debate descended into chaos. So Main Street Castleisland will remain Main Street for the foreseeable future. In Irish it is simply An Phríomhshráid, a direct translation.

Kerry Women in Literature at Kerry Writers’ Museum

There was a big imbalance in the representation of Kerry writers in the KWM. The exhibition which opened on May 28 2025 set out to right that wrong.

On opening night Owen MacMahon told me of a conversation he heard reported when the question of gender balance was being debated in the golf club. The wise man in this conversation said that any lady who sought equality with men lacked ambition.

I don’t think many would argue that the women in this exhibition were the equal or superior to household names in Irish writing such as Bryan MacMahon, John B. Keane or Brendan Kennelly. They still deserve some recognition.

Maureen Beasley’s daughter reads what the museum has to say about her mother.

The Beasley family with the Chair of KWM, David Browne

Artist and model…The work of the writers is “reimagined through contemporary art.” Artist, Damien Daly, chose Beatrice Mannix to represent the themes in Sonja Broderick’s poem, The Best of Times.

They posed for me by the artwork. My picture does not do the piece justice.

Eamon ÓMurchú, Seán MacCarthy and Gabriel Fitzmaurice at the opening.

Listowel Literary Festival 2025

Old friends, Ned O’Sullivan, Chair of Listowel Writers’ Week and Minister for Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media, Patrick O’Donovan. The minister endowed Listowel Writers’ Week with a grant of €25k.

(Photo: Dominick Walsh)

Some of the widespread coverage in the media. Listowel Literary Festival 2025 was a welcome PR boost for tourism in Listowel.

A Poem

This Pat Boran poem was the unseen poem in this year’s Leaving Cert .English paper.

As Far as Turn Back

After we’ve walked for long enough

the conversation peters out,

and grunts, sniffs and the occasional cough

are all that punctuate the quiet.

Now and then, there’s a heel-burst

slipstream of shingle; a see-saw

slate-flat rock taps and trembles

its morse code underfoot;

a crow caws, a sheep responds

from a clump of grass a field away.

But that’s about the size of it.

No path agreed in advance,

we’re just out walking on this lockdown day,

taking the air and, taken by it,

leaving the road for animal tracks,

heading, as my father’s phrase would have it,

‘as far as turn back’.

And who knew that not knowing

where that turn would turn out to be

would turn out to be

the thing we’d miss the most.

Pat Boran

Sunday Market

Every Sunday from now ’til October from 11.00a.m. to 3.00p.m. you can buy crafts, baked goods, vegetables, strawberries, knick knacks and more. Brew and Banter had a previous commitment last Sunday but they’ll be back.

The school principal was on hand to support the stall holders.

Lovely hand made toys and gifts

These are to lads I told you about yesterday. From their base in Tralee they are selling popular 3D printer made items.

A Fact from Ireland’s Own

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I’m Back

This is Aoife McKenna, aged 3 and 3/4. She is wearing her Kildare jersey because the photo was taken on Sunday, April 27 2025. Her team unfortunately lost to Meath and are now back in the Tailteann Cup. When they win that and move up again, Aoife will be old enough to support them.

Aoife is the reason I was galavanting for the last while. My Cork visitors are also the reason I have been absent from here for the past 2 weeks. I’m back now to tell you about my travels.

Another One Gone

Bailey and Co is closing soon after a successful run at the fashion trade in Listowel and North Kerry. Best of luck to Norella and Danny. Hopefully we’ll see another nice shop here very soon.

A Listowel Connection Lost

Warren Buckley sent us this photo and the story

In 1895 Carson’s arguments saw the removal of Oscar Wilde from the public eye in London. In 2025 Carson’s plaque saw the removal of another writer, George Fitzmaurice, from the public eye in Dublin. 

No 3 Harcourt Street, where Listowel writer George Fitzmaurice once lived, previously housed a restaurant and bar. “The Pie Dish” and “The Magic Glasses” were named after Fitzmaurice’s plays . Now a cocktail bar called the “Pen and Player” the owners appear to favour Carson over Fitzmaurice and have removed Fitmaurice’s plaque. A little piece of Listowel history lost.

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George Fitzmaurice is an almost forgotten figure in the realms of Irish literature. Kerry Writers’ Museum has a room dedicated to him. One of his plays, The Country Dressmaker, was recently staged in St. John’s. Outside of Listowel he is not widely recognised, so here is a small biography from KWM website.

Fitzmaurice was known for his sharp wit, unique dialogue, and rich characters that captured the essence of rural Ireland in the early 20th century.

Born in 1877, just outside Listowel, Fitzmaurice developed an early fascination with the Irish language and literature. His plays and novels were celebrated for their authentic portrayal of the Irish people and their struggles, often with a touch of humor and satire.

Fitzmaurice’s most famous play, “The Country Dressmaker,” premiered in 1907 at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, where it received critical acclaim and launched Fitzmaurice’s career. He went on to produce many more successful works, including “The Magic Glasses,” and “The Moonlighter”.

Despite his success, Fitzmaurice remained humble and dedicated to his craft, writing until his death in 1963. He leaves behind a legacy as one of Ireland’s greatest writers, capturing the essence of rural Irish life and the struggles of its people.

You may view a lecture on Fitzmaurice by Dr. Fiona Brennan on the KWM YouTube channel

Listowel Literary Festival

In the time slot in the calendar of Irish festivals which was, up to 2024, occupied by Listowel Writers’ Week, we now will have a newly named festival, Listowel Literary Festival.

Photo and text from Radio Kerry website

In Dominick Walsh’s photograph at the launch are

“12 year old Listowel writer & illustrator Danny Lawlor , Maire Logue Artistic Director of SJT and Curator of Listowel Literary Festival , Katie O’Brien Executive Director of Listowel Writers’ Week and Cara Trant, Artistic Director of KWM and Producer of Listowel Literary Festival . “

“A Unified Celebration of Creativity and Strength in Unity in Ireland’s Literary Capital of Listowel. In 2025, Listowel proudly reaffirms its place at the heart of Ireland’s literary landscape with the launch of Listowel Literature Festival, a landmark collaboration between Listowel Writers’ Week, Kerry Writers’ Museum, and St. John’s Theatre and Arts Centre. This collective festival offering will take place from May 28th to June 1st, welcoming audiences to a dynamic celebration of storytelling, creativity, and community. Rooted in Listowel’s exceptional literary heritage, this year’s programme embraces an inclusive, vibrant, and boldly imaginative vision. The initiative draws inspiration from the words of Brendan Kennelly: “Begin again to the summoning birds.” That call to renewal echoes throughout the 2025 programme. “

( P.S. I think Literature in the above text is a typo. It is Listowel Literary Festival)

The full programme is on the Writers’ Week website at the below link

Listowel Writers’ Week

A Fact

In 1993, Intel launched its Pentium Processor. Intel was then at the cutting edge of digital technology

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