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Lines of Vision - Stylish and Trendy Sunglasses for Men & Women | UV Protection, Polarized Lenses | Perfect for Outdoor Activities, Driving, and Beach Vacations
Lines of Vision - Stylish and Trendy Sunglasses for Men & Women | UV Protection, Polarized Lenses | Perfect for Outdoor Activities, Driving, and Beach Vacations

Lines of Vision - Stylish and Trendy Sunglasses for Men & Women | UV Protection, Polarized Lenses | Perfect for Outdoor Activities, Driving, and Beach Vacations

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Product Description

This anthology, published to mark the 150th anniversary of the National Gallery of Ireland, features fifty-six Irish writers have contributed a short story, essay or poem inspired by a work in the collection.
'The paintings were windows through which I could see snippets of other people's past lives, and in doing so recognize something of my own.' So muses Christine Dwyer Hickey in her response to The Goose Girl by Stanley Royle in a collection of new writing that brings together two celebrated traditions: art and literature.

More than fifty acclaimed Irish novelists, playwrights and poets have selected pictures from the National Gallery of Ireland as setting-off points to explore ideas and tell stories about art, love, loss, family, dreams, memory, places and privacy. The artworks and the literary responses to them are wonderfully vibrant in their diversity.

'The paintings were windows through which I could see snippets of other people’s past lives, and in doing so recognize something of my own.’ So muses Christine Dwyer Hickey in her response to The Goose Girl by Stanley Royle. Seamus Heaney finds quiet beauty in a canal path by Gustave Caillebotte; Roddy Doyle gives voice to a man in a crowd painted by Jack B. Yeats; Colm Tóibín considers a portrait redolent with possibilities by John Butler Yeats; John Banville sheds light on Caravaggio’s darkness; Jennifer Johnston recollects colourful mealtimes by way of Bonnard; Kevin Barry tells the tale of a bittersweet fairground encounter, stirred by Ernest Procter’s The Devil’s Disc; Colum McCann visualizes women workers in wartime factories via Mary Swanzy’s abstract Propellers; Paula Meehan poignantly presents the postwar world inhabited by Irish artist Gerard Dillon.

Each of the writers in Lines of Vision creates and connects vividly with other worlds – observed, remembered and imagined. Perceptive and, at times, deeply personal, their creative responses to pictures invite us to look at art in new lights and from different angles.

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