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‘On Skellig Michael, thousands of birds appear and disappear, erecting towers, coming together in wings of movement which build and unravel over the empty sea. Often, no one else is there to stand beside me on the island. The mind wanders; links with the past are easily made; ancient ways of viewing things come alive.’
A critically acclaimed practitioner of conceptual and installation art, David Ireland has taken the concept of art itself as one of his subjects. This book accompanies a full-scale retrospective of his work and offers an overview of more than 30 years ofhis accomplishments.
The Skellig islands are in the parish of Killemlagh.
The bestselling story about love, loss and hope that launched David Almond as one of the best children's writers of today. Winner of the Carnegie Medal and the Whitbread children's book of the Year Award. When a move to a new house coincides with his baby sister's illness, Michael's world seems suddenly lonely and uncertain. Then, one Sunday afternoon, he stumbles into the old, ramshackle garage of his new home, and finds something magical. A strange creature - part owl, part angel, a being who needs Michael's help if he is to survive. With his new friend Mina, Michael nourishes Skellig back to health, while his baby sister languishes in the hospital. But Skellig is far more than he at first appears, and as he helps Michael breathe life into his tiny sister, Michael's world changes for ever . . . Skellig won the Carnegie Medal and the Whitbread Children's Book Award. David Almond is also winner of the 2010 Hans Christian Andersen award. Powerful and moving - The Guardian This newly jacketed edition celebrates 20 years of this multi-award-winning novel.
In the summer of 2000, Catherine Merrigan took a rough boat ride out to the rocky island of Skellig Michael off the coast of County Kerry to begin her new job as a guide. Almost alone on the dark and mystical island that first night, she realised she'd made a big mistake and decided she would leave the next morning. A massive storm blew up though and she couldn't leave for five days; whereupon, in fact, she stayed. Catherine has spent six months of every year since showing visitors this magical isle, and hanging out with her beloved puffins - 10,000 breeding pairs which she likes to say she counts every night, by name. Here is a one of a kind insight into life on this dramatically beautiful, monastic sanctuary, laden with a millennium and a half of some of Ireland's richest history, and in the company of a hundred thousand nesting birds. Told with love and passion, Catherine's anecdotes are interspersed with her photos of 'Charlie Chaplin' puffins, Skellig's dramatic staircases, and much more.
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'Magic that takes you out, far out, of this time and this world.' George Bernard Shaw, after a visit to Skellig This is the story of two of the world's most stunning and unspoilt islands, Skellig Michael and Small Skellig, which lie off the coast of Kerry. Lavelle explores the extraordinary, isolated Early Christian monastic settlement with its stone 'beehive' huts. He describes the abundant bird life, including the huge colony of gannets, and tells of the history, legend, geology, plant life, the lighthouse, the seals and the underwater world. There has been a huge growth in interest in these spectacular islands, driven by Ireland's Wild Atlantic Way and the filming of Star Wars. A comprehensive, accessible and beautiful book on a unique and fascinating place.
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NEW EDITION 'Magic that takes you out, far out, of this time and this world.' George Bernard Shaw, after a visit to Skellig This is the story of two of the world's most stunning and unspoilt islands,Skellig Michael and Small Skellig, which lie off the coast of Kerry.Lavelle explores the extraordinary, isolated Early Christian monastic settlement with its stone 'beehive' huts. He describes the abundant bird life, including the huge colony of gannets, and tells of the history, legend, geology, plant life, the lighthouse, the seals and the underwater world. A comprehensive and accessible book on a unique and fascinating place.
Skellig Michael (in Irish, Sceilg MhichÃl, or Michael's rock) is the larger of the two Skellig islands, situated in the Atlantic Ocean some 12 km off the coast of south-west Kerry. For some 700 years after its foundation in the 6th century, the monastery (a climb of 670 steps and almost 230 metres above sea level) was home to a vibrant monastic community, one of the earliest of such settlements in Ireland. In 1996 it was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site and is today maintained by the Office of Public Works. Despite its proximity to the mainland, however, Skellig Michael is not well known, not least due to the significant challenges it presents to the casual visitor. And yet its stark beauty holds a fascination for many. For Voices at the World's Edge, Dublin-born poet Paddy Bushe, long since living within sight of the Skelligs, invited some of Ireland's best-known poets to travel with him to Skellig Michael, to spend the night among bee-hive huts, puffins and gannets, and to write of the experience at the onetime edge of the world. Book jacket.