Literary Attractions
Start as you mean to go on with Dublin’s Literary Pub Crawl, combining the city’s literary heritage with some of the pubs for which it’s famous. George Bernard Shaw’s birthplace is open to the public and there are many guided literary walks to see places associated with Oscar Wilde, Bram Stoker, Brendan Behan and other Dublin writers. Trace Leopold Bloom’s famous walk from Ulysses by following 14 bronze plaques set into footpaths. Or investigate the Book of Kells (c9th century) in Trinity College’s Library, one of Ireland’s biggest tourist attractions.
Literary Festivals
In Dublin there’s a festival for each season – Dublin Book Festival (March), Poetry Now (March), Seachtain na Gaeilge (March), Dublin: One City One Book (April), Franco-Irish Literary Festival (April), Dublin Writers’ Festival (June), Bloomsweek (June), Mountains to Sea (September), BOOKS 2010 (September), IMRAM – Irish language literature festival (September), Children’s Book Festival (October).
Literary AttractionsStart as you mean to go on with Dublin’s Literary Pub Crawl, combining the city’s literary heritage with some of the pubs for which it’s famous. George Bernard Shaw’s birthplace is open to the public and there are many guided literary walks to see places associated with Oscar Wilde, Bram Stoker, Brendan Behan and other Dublin writers. Trace Leopold Bloom’s famous walk from Ulysses by following 14 bronze plaques set into footpaths. Or investigate the Book of Kells (c9th century) in Trinity College’s Library, one of Ireland’s biggest tourist attractions.Literary FestivalsIn Dublin there’s a festival for each season – Dublin Book Festival (March), Poetry Now (March), Seachtain na Gaeilge (March), Dublin: One City One Book (April), Franco-Irish Literary Festival (April), Dublin Writers’ Festival (June), Bloomsweek (June), Mountains to Sea (September), BOOKS 2010 (September), IMRAM – Irish language literature festival (September), Children’s Book Festival (October).
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