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Natter

Natter

著者: Michelle McDonagh & Kate Durrant
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

All natter and no notions! Join best selling writer Michelle McDonagh and writer and broadcaster Kate Durrant as they chat books, life and lots more with Irish and international authors.


Books, Chat, No Notions.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Natter Podcast
アート 文学史・文学批評
エピソード
  • Louise Nealon on "Everything That Is Beautiful", the Pressure of a Brilliant Debut Novel and Writing Through Creative Block
    2026/04/08

    Bestselling Irish author Louise Nealon joins Kate and Michelle to talk about her much-anticipated new novel, Everything That Is Beautiful. A story of three women, an Irish wedding and the traumatic secret that has kept them from each other for years.


    Louise unpacks how the novel came together, why she made truth itself the central tension of the book and what it means when people are right about something but still cause damage in the way they reveal it. She reflects on the fine line between honesty and being too harsh within families, and the question that sits at the heart of the novel!


    She also opens up about the very real pressure of following a debut as celebrated as Snowflake. A deeply honest conversation about storytelling, the subjectivity of truth, imaginary friends and why the best writing often comes from getting out of your own way.


    Key takeaways for writers:

    • Placing impossibly high literary expectations on yourself is one of the fastest ways to stop writing altogether.
    • Characters surprise you, the excitement of not knowing where they'll go is often what keeps you at the desk.
    • A "scenes I'd like to see" document can be a more generative planning tool than a chapter-by-chapter outline.
    • The sentences you agonise over most are sometimes the ones readers fly past.
    • Finishing the book is the only thing you actually have to do, everything else follows from that.


    Natter is proudly brought to you in association with Bookstation Ireland & IrishCentral.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    43 分
  • Ruth O'Leary on "The Last Week of Him", How Well Do We Really Know Our Friends and Life on the Big Screen
    2026/03/18

    Bestselling Irish author Ruth O'Leary joins Kate and Michelle to discuss her latest novel, The Last Week of Him, the story of three women reunited in the west of Ireland after receiving a shocking WhatsApp message about the sudden death of their secondary school golden boy.


    Ruth walks through exactly how the book came together, she also reflects on the central question she hopes the book raises for readers and book clubs: how well do we really know our friends when so much of our insight into their lives comes through social media? And does a difficult upbringing ever truly excuse the way we treat people?


    Away from the page, Ruth shares stories from over twelve years working as a film and TV extra, from playing a nun beside Russell Crowe to running up Wicklow fields as a Viking.


    A joyful, generous conversation about storytelling, friendship & writing.


    Key takeaways for writers:

    • A strong visual concept, can anchor an entire novel before you write a word.
    • Using a tight timeframe as a structural scaffold keeps your plot grounded and your pacing sharp.
    • Writing detailed character bios with reference images before drafting helps bring fictional people to vivid life.
    • Location is not just backdrop, it actively shapes what your characters can and cannot do.
    • Epilogues matter: if you are invested in your characters, your readers will be too.


    Natter is proudly brought to you in association with Bookstation Ireland & IrishCentral.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    37 分
  • Jen Bray on her debut novel “The Lies Between Us”, Thoughtful Rejections and Persistence
    2026/03/04

    After many years of writing, journalist and Sunday Times Ireland political editor Jennifer Bray finally landed her dream book deal and “The Lies Between Us” was worth every moment of the wait.


    In this episode, Jen joins Kate and Michelle for an honest conversation about the long road to publication. She reflects on the early manuscripts that didn't make the cut, the emotional chaos of being on submission and why she believes persistence is the single most important quality a writer can have.


    She also digs into the concept of the "thoughtful rejection", how detailed feedback from agents, though hard to hear, can completely redirect a writer's journey for the better.


    A must-listen for anyone who has ever wondered whether to keep going. Spoiler: keep going.


    Key takeaways for writers:

    • Every unpublished manuscript teaches you something, don't dismiss the ones that don't make it.
    • Treat detailed rejection feedback as a signpost, not a dead end.
    • Research agents carefully and show you understand what they're looking for.
    • Strong, believable characters are the foundation of great fiction.
    • Persistence is one of the only things that separates published writers from unpublished ones.


    Natter is proudly brought to you in association with Bookstation Ireland & IrishCentral.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    38 分
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