incorrigibly plural.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Incorrigibly Plural features the work of these fourteen writers:

Gerard Lee has worked as a freelance actor for twenty years, having trained at the Samuel Beckett Centre in Trinity College Dublin. He has published poetry in The Shop and in Poetry Ireland Review. He has also written for Sunday Miscellany on RTÉ, and is included in Best of Sunday Miscellany 1995-2000. He is married to Paula, and his two favourite poems are MollyRose (9) and Nancy (6).
mailto:leege@tcd.ie

Antonia Hart was born in Dublin. She studied law at Trinity College Dublin, and has an MA in Journalism from Dublin City University and an MSc in Multimedia Systems, also from Trinity. Her work has been published in the Momaya Annual Review and The Stinging Fly. She was twice longlisted for the Fish International Short Story Competition.
mailto:antoniahart@eircom.net

Therese Caherty is a journalist working and writing in Dublin.
mailto:cahertyt@gofree.indigo.ie


Craig Caulfield is native of Boston’s North Shore. He received a degree from the University of Vermont in 2005, graduating with Honors in English and History.
mailto:caulfiec@tcd.ie

Johanna Foster grew up in NYC. She has lived in Austria, Germany and the Netherlands before moving to Dublin.
mailto:fosterj1@tcd.ie

Anna Murphy grew up in County Tipperary and now lives in County Wicklow. She has worked as a print and radio journalist and is currently a reporter with RTÉ News.
mailto:murpha12@tcd.ie

Erik Vatne was raised in Schraalenburgh, New Jersey. He was educated at The Barnstable Academy, Bard College and University College Dublin. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in Barrow Street, The Paris Review, The Brooklyn Review, The Philadelphia City Paper (2nd Prize Annual Poetry Contest) and The Allegheny Review.
mailto:mediciboy@aol.com

Jonathan Cooper was born in Wolverhampton in 1981, and studied English at the University of York. He has written plays workshopped at The Door, the Birmingham REP’s new writing space, and has had a series of monologues, ‘Parentheses’, performed at The King’s Head theatre in Islington. He is currently working on a novel.
mailto:jacooper@tcd.ie

Ragnar Almqvist was born in Dublin in 1983. He graduated from University College Dublin in November 2005, with a degree in German and English. In addition to literature, he takes a keen interest in politics, psychology and education theory. He intends to pursue studies in education theory when he finishes at Trinity in September.
mailto:ragnaralmqvist@eircom.net

Jennifer Brady has had stories published in the Stinging Fly magazine and Southword Journal. She was shortlisted for the Sean O’Faolain Short Story Competition 2003 and specially selected for ‘Short Short’ Story Competition by Dave Eggers in The Guardian in 2004. She has written and directed a one-act monologue, which was performed in Players Theatre, TCD as part of New Writers’ Week 2006.
mailto:jenniferbrady@ireland.com

Luke Anderson lives in Charlottesville, Virginia, at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains. He received a degree in English literature from the University of Virginia in 2005, and is currently seeking publication for his first novel.
mailto:anderslw@tcd.ie

Megan Paslawski was born in Philadelphia and raised in New England. She studied English Literature and Political Science at McGill University in Montreal, which she now considers her hometown. This summer, she will be the 2006 Writing Director for the New England Playwrights Project. Her work appears in the spring edition of Southword Journal.
mailto:megan@betweenprojects.net

Keith Payne travelled for seven years before attending Trinity College, Dublin, where he read English. He is currently working on a collection of poetry.
mailto:FiDchEllEsq@gmail.com

Thomas Martin graduated from University College Dublin with a first-class honours degree in English and Philosophy. He won the UCD literary society’s short story of the year 2005, has published short stories in The Sunday Tribune and has twice been short-listed for the Hennessy New Irish Writing award.
mailto:thomasfmartin@gmail.com

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