Scribendi: Portraits of Irish Writers
- Ireland’s contemporary writers
- Categories:Photography & Video Pictorials
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication Place:Ireland
- Publication date:October,2025
- Pages:248
- Retail Price:(Unknown)
- Size:(Unknown)
- Text Color:(Unknown)
- Words:(Unknown)
Request for Review Sample
Through our website, you are submitting the application for you to evaluate the book. If it is approved, you may read the electronic edition of this book online.
Special Note:
The submission of this request means you agree to inquire the books through RIGHTOL,
and undertakes, within 18 months, not to inquire the books through any other third party,
including but not limited to authors, publishers and other rights agencies.
Otherwise we have right to terminate your use of Rights Online and our cooperation,
as well as require a penalty of no less than 1000 US Dollars.
Review
Description
Featuring over 100 captivating portraits of many of Ireland’s greatest contemporary writers, alongside conversations with each on their writing life, Scribendi is a landmark book of portraits of Irish writers by internationally renowned photographer Steve Pyke.
‘I come from the English Midlands, but I became a photographer in Ireland. I made my first portraits in Dublin in the early 1980s. It was immediately apparent to me then how important Irish writers are to their country, in a way I never saw in England or elsewhere.
One of my earliest portrait sessions was in 1985, with the writer Neil Jordan in my first studio in London. I’ve gone on for the subsequent forty years photographing the Irish writers whose books have excited me. Early sitters include Seamus Heaney, Edna O’Brien and John McGahern. More recent trips have led me to the next generation, such writers as Anne Enright, Kevin Barry and Louise Kennedy. I photographed these people because I had read their books and admired and wanted to meet them, and also to make a record for posterity. Their faces can bring to others something of the feeling and way of thinking behind their words.’
Author
Read The Sky (Harvill), Philosophers (OUP) and Poguetry (Faber). He has received many awards for his photography, including an MBE in 2003. His work has appeared in the National Portrait Galleries in London and Washington, D.C., among other museums. He was staff portrait photographer at The New Yorker 2004-2014.






