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Pat Ingoldsby
   
Life
Humourist and children’s writer and author of radio plays and another at the Gaiety; children’s broadcaster; regular appearances on the Lambert’s Bosco show in the late 1970sand hosted children’s TV shows (Pat’s Hat, and Pat’s Chat) on RTE in 1980s; issued The Peculiar Sensation of Being Irish (1995); Laugh without Prejudice (1996); sells his books on centre-city streets; lives in Clontarf, Dublin.
[ top ] Works
Poetry,
Welcome to my head (Please Remove Your Boots) (1986);
Salty Water (1988);
Scandal Sisters (1990);
How was it for you Doctor? (1994);
Poems so fresh and so new ...Yahoo! (1995);
If you don’t tell anybody I won’t (1996);
See Liz She Spins (1997);
Half a Hug (1998);
Beautfiul cracked eyes (1999);
The Blue Etee Wet (2000);
Do Lámh I Mo Brá (2001);
The Frenchwoman And The Sky (2003).
Plays,
Hisself (Peacock Th.);
When am I Gettin’ Me Clothes (Peacock Th.; adapted for Radio Eireann);
The Dark Days of Denny Lacey (Radio 1); She Came Up From the Sea (Radio 1);
Fire Is Far Enough (Radio 1);
Liffey Ever Is (Radio 1)
Short stories, The Peculiar Sensation of Being Irish (Cork: Killeen Publs. 1995), 201pp.; Laugh Without Prejudice (Cork: Killeen Publs. 1996); In My Own Voice [CD].
For children,
Zaney Tales (stories);
Rhymin’ Simon (play);
Yeukface the Yeuk and the Spotty Grousler (play);
Tell Me A Story, Pat (cassette tape).
[ top ] Criticism
Aubrey Malone, review of The Peculiar Sensation of Being Irish, in Books
Ireland (Feb. 1996), p.24 [appreciative]. [ top ] Notes
Nationmaster webpage gives details: ‘ His most distinctive style of poetry is his humourist style. A recurring character, Wesley Quench, appears in roles such as the driver of a Flying See-Saw Brigade. Another poem, Vagina in the Vatican , depicts a vagina sneaking into the Vatican unstopped because no one knew what it was - except for a few who couldn’t let slip that they did’ [link].
Bravo Bratislava!: His books since 1998 are protected by the Bratislava Accord 1993 (Sect. 2 cre/009 manifest-minsk) preventing their contents appearing in school textbooks, exams, elocution classes or anything with the word “Arts” in it. (See Nationmaster [link].)
Pat Ingoldsby web page.
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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