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Books from Pamela Anderson and Frances Haugen among the non-fiction to look out for in 2023

From memoir to biography.

FROM INTERVIEWS WITH alleged murderers to biographies to memoirs, there’s a lot of really interesting non-fiction due out in 2023.

Here are some of the highlights, month by month.

January

  • Love, Pamela by Pamela Anderson

Headline 

1990s mega-celebrity Pamela Anderson writes her own story, from how she was discovered as a teenager and became a Playboy covergirl, to creating her own career and dealing with the glare of the media.

February 

  • A Woman in Defence: A Soldier’s Story of the Enemy Within the Irish Army by Karina Molloy

Hachette Ireland

Former soldier Karina Molloy gained many firsts during her 31-year career in the Irish Defence Forces – like being the first female to get promoted to Senior Non-
Commissioned Officer (NCO) rank. But despite her pioneering career, she has faced many setbacks, including sexual harassment, assault and routine bullying. She tells her story of determination and resilience in this book.  

  • The Power of Connection: Change your relationships, transform your life by Dr Harry Barry

Orion Spring

Dr Harry Barry draws on his decades of experience as a doctor to show how we can improve our emotional connections and transform our mental wellbeing. It looks at 
how to improve our skills of emotional connection and help people feel less lonely, and experience deeper friendships and personal relationships.

  • Running feet, sharp noses: Essays on the animal world 

Paper Visual Art

From a singular independent publisher, this book is a collection of essays on the animal world, and how animals “affect our sense of self, our memories, our actions”. Includes contributions by Latifa Akay, Sara Baume, John Berger, June Caldwell, Niamh Campbell, Vona Groarke, Edward Hoagland, Sabrina Mandanici, Darragh McCausland, Tim MacGabhann, Honor Moore, Eileen Myles, Stephen Sexton, Jessica Traynor, Erica Van Horn, and Suzanne Walsh.

March 

  • Wild Embrace: Connecting with the Wonder of Ireland’s Natural World by Anja Murray

Hachette Books 

It’s a tough time, especially given the climate change issues that abound. In this book, ecologist, broadcaster and nature enthusiast Anja Murray offers a gentle and effective antidote to eco-overwhelm, by focusing on the unseen wonders of Ireland’s natural world. 

  • No Better Boy: Listening to Paddy Canny by Helen O’Shea

Lilliput Press

This book tells the story of legendary East Clare fiddler Paddy Canny, as well as taking in rural life in mid-twentieth-century Ireland.

  • Perils & Prospects of a United Ireland by Padraig O’Malley

Lilliput Press

Padraig O’Malley is an Irish international peacemaker, author, and professor. In this book he looks at questions around the future of Northern Irish politics, including the idea of reunification. It includes interviews from 97 political players, academics, political influencers, a cross-section of the political grandees who negotiated the B/GFA and faith leaders between February 2020 and June 2021. 

April

  • Glow by Georgie Crawford

Hachette Books 

Georgie Crawford received the news in 2017 that she had cancer, which led to major changes in her life an career. In this book the podcaster tells her story and and looks at how we can connect to a deeper sense of wellbeing and happiness. 

May

  • Perfectly Imperfect by Ellen Keane

Gill Books

Paralympic champion and Dancing With the Stars finalist Ellen Keane writes about life with a limb difference and how she went form a shy young girl to a strong, confident woman.

  • Every Choice Matters: Why I Blew the Whistle on Facebook by Frances Haugen

Hodder & Stoughton

Frances Haugen was the Facebook whistleblower, who released files gathered in her time working for the company. She went on to testify before US Congress and do countless interviews. This book covers her route to making this decision and how she made the life and career choices she did.

  • A Life in Medicine: From Aesculapius to Beckett by Eoin O’Brien

Lilliput Press

Eoin O’Brien is renowned cardiologist and clinical scientist who writes here about his life in medicine and literature. He writes about his training in medicine in the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin and in its teaching hospitals, as well as how interest in literature led him to become friends with people including Nevill Johnson, Samuel Beckett, Con Leventhal, Edith Fourneir, Brian O’Doherty and Niall Sheridan.  

  • Wild Waters by Richard Nairn

Gill Books

Nairn has previously written about Wild Woods and Wild Shores, and in this book turns his eye to the Ireland’s rivers and lakes. The ecologist and writer mixes nature writing, history and personal experience as he explores this side of the country.

June 

  • Is Ireland Neutral – Conor Gallagher

Gill Books

Conor Gallagher, the crime correspondent at the Irish Times, examines neutrality in Ireland and the practical and ethical implications of choosing a ‘side ‘. Set to be a hugely topical publication.

  • I Will Be Good: A Dublin Memoir by Peig McManus

Hachette Books Ireland

Peig McManus writes about her 1940s Dublin childhood, living in tenements, under the shadow of the Second World War. The book looks at how her community’s way of life was shattered when the slums were cleared to make way for a new life for the people of the inner city. Peig went on to become one of Ireland’s foremost campaigners for educational reform. 

July

  • A Thread of Violence by Mark O’Connell 

Granta

O’Connell’s latest will be the first full length book to be published on Malcolm Mcarthur’s life and crimes. He was involved in the 1982 ‘GUBU’ murders after he decided rob a bank when he ran out of money – but in the process of securing a gun and a car he killed two people. His eventual arrest in the apartment of Ireland’s Attorney General nearly brought down the government. Mark O’Connell set out to unravel the story, and tracked down Macarthur, interviewing him about what happened – only to have to face his own set of questions about what he was doing. 

October

  •  Black and Irish: Celebrating Black Irish Legends, Trailblazers and Everyday Heroes

Little Island Books

Published to mark Ireland’s Black History Month in October 2023, this book from the Black and Irish team will cover historic and current figures from the worlds of the arts, sport, business, politics and social activism, as well as celebrating lesser known figures making a difference in Irish communities today. 

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    Mute LangerDan
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    Jul 20th 2020, 10:52 PM

    Michelle O’Neill is absolutely correct in her call for this, but the North being the North; it is pretty obvious that the push from Michelle and the pushback from Arlene stems from something other than Coronavirus/public health.

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    Mute Richard Cronin
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    Jul 21st 2020, 12:02 AM

    @LangerDan: What about that funeral she attended not so long ago. Didn’t see much social distancing, did you? Plus did everybody there do self isolation after? Only thing she did with that statement was prove she is every bit hypocrite that she shamelessly branded to others.

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    Mute LangerDan
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    Jul 21st 2020, 12:21 AM

    @Richard Cronin: There has been more than enough hypocrisy to share around during this pandemic from many quarters. However it is important that we do not allow past hypocrisy create tunnel vision. I’d rather a hypocrite make a U-Turn than stick dogmatically to their original position. The issue here is, it makes perfect epidemiological sense to have an island wide solution to this; but the Northern parties are so entrenched in Green-Orange politics that such sound calls get proposed and opposed under a different light.

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    Mute Richard Cronin
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    Jul 21st 2020, 12:48 AM

    @LangerDan: so why are all the airports & harbors open? It’s not like the virus is going away anytime soon. Plus how is all this to be payed for? Most hypocrites are around for the sound bites but not for actual problem solving

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    Mute Matthew O'Kane
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    Jul 21st 2020, 9:57 AM

    @LangerDan: cash for ash foster would rather flood the place with unchecked tourists than listen to sf warning

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    Mute Brendan Walsh
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    Jul 20th 2020, 11:11 PM

    She’s 100% right but unfortunately has undermined her own authority on Covid by attending Sinn Féin funeral that broke all common sense rules of social distancing.

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    Mute Richard Cronin
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    Jul 20th 2020, 11:58 PM

    @Brendan Walsh: hypocrisy in action

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    Mute John Mulligan
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    Jul 21st 2020, 8:04 AM

    @Brendan Walsh: she had no choice, she was only following orders.

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    Mute Keith MacSuibhne
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    Jul 21st 2020, 8:09 AM

    @John Mulligan: yaaaaawwwwwnnnn

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    Mute M Bowe
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    Jul 21st 2020, 8:12 AM

    @Richard Cronin: it is 14 days today since that funeral and as the numbers show, it was so well organised around social distancing regulations that not a single case of covid has been traced to it.

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    Mute M Bowe
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    Jul 21st 2020, 8:16 AM

    @M Bowe: actually 21 days.

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    Mute Bornicks eyes.
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    Jul 21st 2020, 3:06 PM

    @M Bowe: the west Brits are out in style

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    Mute Toon Army
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    Jul 20th 2020, 10:45 PM

    Poor Arlene. Would sooner see her people dessimated by a lethal virus than give an inch on her beloved Union.

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    Mute TL55
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    Jul 20th 2020, 10:54 PM

    @Toon Army: Maybe Michelle and colleagues should have thought of that before organising a mass attendance at a recent funeral.

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    Mute Derek Doogan
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    Jul 20th 2020, 10:54 PM

    @TL55: I don’t think they planned on a funeral??

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    Mute Syl Farrell
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    Jul 20th 2020, 10:47 PM

    Sinn Fein demanding internment for people entering Ireland. Detained without trial. Hilarious.

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    Mute Brian Renaghan
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    Jul 20th 2020, 11:31 PM

    Does anyone really take this woman seriously?

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    Mute Christopher Mulrooney #WeAreStarfleet
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    Jul 21st 2020, 12:22 AM

    @Brian Renaghan: Of course not Arlene Foster is a relic of the old era but luckily people are listening to Michelle O’Neill and taking what she says seriously.

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    Mute Dan Looney
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    Jul 20th 2020, 11:17 PM

    When it came to closing and opening schools, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales took a different approach than England, so why are they insistant that they MUST now maintain the common travel area controls (or rather a lack of controls) with the rest of UK.

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    Mute camio55
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    Jul 21st 2020, 12:35 AM

    It really is hard to take anything from SF seriously. This type of proposal requires consensus from the executive and that is the forum for such an initiative. This solo run is just sectarian politics at its worst.

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    Mute M Bowe
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    Jul 21st 2020, 8:47 AM

    @camio55: do you even know what sectarianism is. Maybe check it out before using it!!!!!

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    Mute camio55
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    Jul 21st 2020, 12:41 PM

    @M Bowe: Sectarianism is a form of prejudice, discrimination, or hatred arising from attaching relations of inferiority and superiority to differences between subdivisions within a group.

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    Mute Ths Fer
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    Jul 21st 2020, 12:01 AM

    Never thought I’d end up on Arlene’s side. Strange times.

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    Mute Richard Cronin
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    Jul 20th 2020, 11:56 PM

    Yet she went to a funeral where how many people attended? Calling for holding areas for people without due process? Congratulations you are every bit the hypocrite you shamelessly brand other politicians

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    Mute John Mulligan
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    Jul 21st 2020, 8:07 AM

    @Richard Cronin: you are giving her too much credit. She doesn’t have any say in policy, she was appointed by the army council and is just a mouthpiece for them, the same as her clone in the south.
    This is just an attempt by her handlers to leverage the covid crisis to suit their own agenda.

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    Mute european liberal
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    Jul 21st 2020, 12:12 AM

    Sinner wants to stop traffic from Britain and align with Republic. Shocker

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    Mute Paddy Doherty
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    Jul 21st 2020, 11:57 AM

    And the Republic of Ireland needs to protect itself from the spread of Covid-19 from Northern Ireland and vice-versa by limiting mass gatherings including attending IRA funerals, Michelle, Mary Lou and Pearse.

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    Mute JP Pilibin
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    Jul 21st 2020, 1:48 AM

    The porous border that the Unionists love could kill a lot of people !

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