sellable

  • Saint Patrick *loved by the world

    Saint Patrick *loved by the world

    3.50

    Each card is imagined, designed and created in Ireland by me, Lainey, with love & laughter at the core, designed to give you a little giggle and a definite ‘feel good factor’ every time you see them.

    Packed with a mix of intelligent wit, inspiration, happiness and fun, each design is created using a mix of standout typography, creative design features, with a ‘little’ edge and a contemporary feel.

    Quality products and design are in LAINEY K’s DNA and is at the core of everything I create. Here is some more information you’ll be wanting to know about the products:

    – Cards are 130mm x 130mm and printed on premium, uncoated 300gsm card, and individually packed in a cello bag with kraft envelope.

  • Saltwater in the Blood

    Saltwater in the Blood

    17.50
    Description

    This is an incredibly inspiring exploration of the sea’s role in the wellness of people and the planet, beautifully written by Easkey Britton – surfer, scientist and social activist. She offers a powerful female perspective on the sea and surfing, explaining what it’s like to be a woman in a man’s world and how she promoted the sport to women in Iran, surfing while wearing a hijab. She speaks of the undiscussed taboo around entering the water while menstruating – and of how she has come to celebrate her own bodily cycles.

    She has developed her own approach to surfing, which instead of seeking to dominate the waves, works in tune with the natural cycles of her body, the moon and the seasons. In a society that rewards busyness, she believes that understanding the influence of cycles becomes even more important – and we all have them, men and women. For Easkey, the sea is a source of mental and physical wellbeing.

    She explores the mental toughness needed in big-wave surfing, and presents surfing as an embodied mindfulness practice in which we can find flow and connect with the movement of the waves. She stresses the need to recognize the ocean as our most powerful ally when addressing our greatest global challenge: the climate crisis. Above all, Easkey’s relationship to the sea has taught her about the need to meet life and evolve with it, rather than seeking to control it.

    By such wisdom our planet might just survive and thrive.

  • Sea of Tranquility

    Sea of Tranquility

    11.95

    In 1912, eighteen-year-old Edwin St. Andrew crosses the Atlantic, exiled from English polite society. In British Columbia, he enters the forest, spellbound by the beauty of the Canadian wilderness, and for a split second all is darkness, the notes of a violin echoing unnaturally through the air. The experience shocks him to his core. Two centuries later Olive Llewelyn, a famous writer, is traveling all over Earth, far away from her home in the second moon colony.

    Within the text of Olives bestselling novel lies a strange passage: a man plays his violin for change in the echoing corridor of an airship terminal as the trees of a forest rise around him. When Gaspery-Jacques Roberts, a detective in the black-skied Night City, is hired to investigate an anomaly in time, he uncovers a series of lives upended: the exiled son of an aristocrat driven to madness, a writer trapped far from home as a pandemic ravages Earth, and a childhood friend from the Night City who, like Gaspery himself, has glimpsed the chance to do something extraordinary that will disrupt the timeline of the universe Sea of Tranquility is a novel that investigates the idea of parallel worlds and possibilities, that plays with the very line along which time should run. Perceptive and poignant about art, and love, and what we must do to survive, it is incredibly compelling.

  • Secret Garden

    Secret Garden

    9.95

    Mary Lennox was horrid. Selfish and spoilt, she was sent to stay with her hunchback uncle in Yorkshire. She hated it.

    But when she finds the way into a secret garden and begins to tend to it, a change comes over her and her life. She meets and befriends a local boy, the talented Dickon, and comes across her sickly cousin Colin who had been kept hidden from her. Between them, the three children work astonishing magic in themselves and those around them.

    The Secret Garden is one of the best-loved stories of all time.

  • Sense and Sensibility

    Sense and Sensibility

    9.95

    Sense and Sensibility is a delightful comedy of manners in which the sisters Elinor and Marianne represent these two qualities. Elinor’s character is one of Augustan detachment, while Marianne, a fervent disciple of the Romantic Age, learns to curb her passionate nature in the interests of survival.

  • Service

    Service

    17.95

    When Hannah learns that famed chef Daniel Costello is facing accusations of sexual assault, she’s thrown back to the summer she spent waitressing at his high-end Dublin restaurant – the plush splendour of the dining rooms, the wild parties after service, the sizzling tension of the kitchens.

    But Hannah also remembers how the attention from Daniel soon morphed from kindness into something darker. Now the restaurant is shuttered and Daniel is faced with the reality of a courtroom. His wife Julie is hiding from paparazzi lenses behind the bedroom curtains.

    Surrounded by the wreckage of the past, Daniel, Julie and Hannah are all forced to reconsider what happened at the restaurant. Their three different voices reveal a story of power and complicity, of the lies that we tell and the courage that it takes to face the truth.

  • Seven Steeples

    Seven Steeples

    14.95

    The mountain remained, unclimbed, for the first year that they lived there. Bell and Sigh, a couple in the infancy of their relationship, cut themselves off from friends and family. They turn their backs on a city divided by scores of streets and hundreds of sterile cherry trees, by a foul river and a declining population of house sparrows.

    Them in and the world out. From the top of the nearby mountain, they are told, you can see seven standing stones, seven schools, and seven steeples. All you have to do is climb.

    Taking place in a remote house in the south-west of Ireland, this rich and vivid novel spans seven years and speaks to the times we live in, asking how we may withdraw, how better to live in the natural world, and how the choices made or avoided lead us home.

  • Shamrock 165 Thy Will Be Done

    Shamrock 165 Thy Will Be Done

    30.00

    CYMRAEG, GAWAIN

  • Show Me the Science

    Show Me the Science

    12.95

    Never Mind the B#ll*cks, Here’s the Science is Professor Luke O’Neill’s biggest runaway bestseller in which he grapples with life’s biggest questions and tells us what science has to say about them.

    Now adapted for children, Show Me the Science asks the same questions – Do we have control over our lives? Can we escape working in terrible jobs? Why do we need vaccinations? Are men’s and women’s brains different? Will we destroy the planet? – and encourages children to apply a scientific mindset in attempting to answer them.

    Covering topics from global pandemics to artificial intelligence, this is a celebration of science and all the brilliant answers it can offer us for a budding generation of professors!

  • Silent City

    Silent City

    16.95

    From the author of LAST ONES LEFT ALIVE comes the story of young female warrior who must start a revolution if she and those she loves are to survive.

    Orpen has always been an outlier in Phoenix City – the only outsider ever admitted to the ranks of the banshees, the female warriors who enforce order, and protect it from the skrake – the ravening creatures that have laid waste to the rest of the country, and gather at the city walls.

    Unrest is building in the city – a deadly sickness is spreading through the workers, while an unspoken disillusionment is creeping amongst the fighting women, weary of enforcing the all-male management’s patriarchal rule, and of the cost, to their sisters, and to young new recruits, of upholding this order.

    Rumour has it that banshees have been taking matters into their own hands, and taking swift and violent revenge. When Orpen’s troop leader falls under suspicion it becomes clear that Orpen will need to muster all her courage and prowess if she and her fellow banshees are going to be able to find a way to escape, and rebuild a society worth fighting for.

  • Sligo and the Great Famine, 1845-52 Walking Skeletons and Shadows

    Sligo and the Great Famine, 1845-52 Walking Skeletons and Shadows

    50.00

    Sligo offers a unique setting for a study of the Great Famine and the book investigates the period from the first appearance of the blight to the immediate aftermath. The shifting, inept and often heartless government policies reflected different attitudes to famine relief and this impacted on the people in a very direct and often catastrophic way.

    Sligo experienced considerable death and emigration in the years from 1845 to 1852; the second worst affected county in the country after Mayo, losing a third of its population in just a few short years. The reaction of local landlords and landholders to the suffering was also varied and the study explored the lengths to which the Famine offered an opportunity to some landlords to impose long-term policies on their estates.

    Padraig Deignan has previously published ‘The Protestant Community in Sligo, 1914-49’ in 2010, ‘Land and People in Nineteenth Century Sligo: from Union to Local Government’ in 2015 and ‘Sligo in the Eighteenth Century’ in 2021.

  • Sligo Field Club Journal Vol 10

    Sligo Field Club Journal Vol 10

    25.00

    An Ongoing Mission: this Journal will continue the ambition of Sligo Field Club, formerly Sligo Antiquarian Society, and now in its eightieth year, to protect Sligo’s rich archaeological and historical heritage. The Journal provides a platform for authors to record and analyse the rich heritage of Sligo and the greater North Connacht region across a wide range of topics.

     

     

  • Sligo Field Club Journal Vol 6

    Sligo Field Club Journal Vol 6

    20.00

    Martin Wilson Presidential

    Martin A. Timoney Editorial

    Don C.F. Cotton
    Peat and wood deposits along the seashore of Co. Sligo

    Martin A. Timoney
    Early Bronze Age Cist Grave, Moylough, 1928

    Martin A. Timoney
    Imitative Fert Burials, Knocknashammer

    Brian Lacey
    Cúl Dreimne, Drumcliff and Colum Cille

    Jim Higgins
    Some County Sligo Rood Lofts

    Jim Higgins
    Medieval Men in Feathered Suits at Sligo Abbey

    Conor MacHale
    Ó Dubhda Family of Sligo

    Eamonn P. Kelly
    Antiquarian Research in Co. Sligo

    Eamonn P. Kelly
    Battle of Moytura and the Enchanted Forge

    John McKeon
    Lord Palmerston’s Sligo Town Properties

    Peter Henry
    Some Sligo-related Armorial Bookplates

    John Mullaney
    V.E. Day 2020

    Conchubhar Ó Crualaoich
    Monasterredan: How Looks Can Deceive

    Harry Keaney
    Field-names ‘Sketch the Land in Language’

    Ben Healy
    God-out-of-the-Bottle

    Rory Callagy
    Remembering Des Smith

  • SLIGO FIELD CLUB Journal Vol. 7

    SLIGO FIELD CLUB Journal Vol. 7

    25.00

    SLIGO FIELD CLUB

  • Sligo Field Club Vol 8

    Sligo Field Club Vol 8

    25.00

    The Sligo Field Club Volume 8, 2022 is the latest issue of the hugely popular Sligo Field Club Journal.

  • Sligo History and Society

    Sligo History and Society

    60.00

    Available Now

    Featuring essays from:

    Mary Gilmartin, Martin Timoney, Noel McCarthy, Carleton Jones, John Waddell, Rachel Moss and Tamyln McHugh, Kieran O’Connor, Yvonne McDermott, Nollaig Ó’Muraíle, Jack Johnston, Brendan Scott, Pádraig Lenihan, Conchubar Ó Crualaoich, David A. Fleming, David Dickson, Ciarán Mac Murchaidh, Tom Bartlett, Marie Boran and Brigid Clesham, Perry McIntyre and Richard Reid, Gerard Moran, Thomas Power, Jonathan Cherry, Fiona Gallagher, Aideen Ireland, Miriam Moffitt,  Mary Timoney, R.F. Foster, Charles Travis, Gregory Daly, Patrick E. O’Brien, Michael Farry, Anne O’Dowd, Proinnsias Breathnach, and Mary Cawley.

    Further information coming soon.