Irish Pages

Irish Pages
Cover of Vol 5, Issue 1: Language and Languages
EditorsChris Agee, Kathleen Jamie, Meg Bateman
CategoriesLiterary magazine
FrequencyBiannual
First issue2002
CountryNorthern Ireland, UK
Based inBelfast
LanguageEnglish and Irish
Websitehttp://www.irishpages.org
ISSN1477-6162

Irish Pages: A Journal of Contemporary Writing is a literary magazine published in Belfast and edited by Chris Agee, Kathleen Jamie and Meg Bateman.

Since its full-scale launch in 2003, Irish Pages has established itself as the island’s premier literary journal, combining a large general readership with outstanding writing from Ireland and overseas. With a print-run now standing at 3,000, the journal is also, increasingly, read outside Ireland and Britain. Widely considered the Irish equivalent of Granta in England, or The Paris Review in the United States, it offers an unrivalled window on the literary and cultural life of the British Isles – and further afield.[1]

Late 2018 saw the launch of the Press in the sense of an annual programme of major book-publishing, under its new bilingual imprint, The Irish Pages Press/Cló an Mhíl Bhuí. Currently, the Press is limited to poetry, essays, memoir and other forms of non-fiction (including the graphic novel form), in both English and Irish.[2]

  1. ^ "About". Irish Pages: A Journal of Contemporary Writing. 22 June 2016. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  2. ^ "The Irish Pages Press Cló An Mhíl Bhuí". Irish Pages: A Journal of Contemporary Writing. 23 October 2016. Retrieved 2 March 2023.