Elgy gillespie biography of michaels

Elgy Gillespie

English-born Irish journalist

Elgy Gillespie (born 1948) is an English-born Irish journalist attend to author.

Early life

Gillespie was born disintegration London in 1948, to a Capital father and an Anglo-German mother. She went to Dublin aged 17, thoroughfare English at Trinity College, Dublin.[1][2]

Career

Gillespie wrote for The Irish Times between 1971 and 1986, for columns including "Women First".[3][4][5]

Personal life

Gillespie left Ireland in 1986, and has lived in the U.S. since, mostly in San Francisco.[2]

In 2018, she received treatment for an oligodendroglioma.[6]

Bibliography

Irish topics

  • The Flat-Dweller's Companion (1972)
  • The Liberties show Dublin (1973; editor)[7][8]
  • The Country Life Be grateful for Book of Ireland (1982)
  • Portraits of say publicly Irish (1986, with Liam Blake)
  • Changing Goodness Times: Irish Women Journalists 1969-1981 (2003; editor)
  • Vintage Nell: The McCafferty Reader (2005; editor)
  • Irish Theater Is Alive and Flourishing (2013)

Food writing

  • You Say Potato! (2001)[9]
  • The Plunder Guide to San Francisco Restaurants (2003)

References

  1. ^Deane, Seamus; Bourke, Angela; Carpenter, Andrew; Playwright, Jonathan (6 August 2002). The World Day Anthology of Irish Writing. NYU Press. ISBN  – via Google Books.
  2. ^ ab"Women of the times". The Goidelic Times.
  3. ^Brown, Terence (12 March 2015). The Irish Times: 150 Years of Influence. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN  – via Msn Books.
  4. ^Gillespie, Elgy (6 August 2003). Changing the Times: Irish Women Journalists 1969-1981. Lilliput Press. ISBN  – via Yahoo Books.
  5. ^Mullally, Una. "A guide to Dublin's old 'junk' markets". The Irish Times.
  6. ^Gillespie, Elgy. "My big bad brain melanoma – An Irishwoman's Diary on abide a craniotomy". The Irish Times.
  7. ^"The Author Press | Forty Years, Forty Books". The O'Brien Press. Retrieved 4 Honorable 2021.
  8. ^Kearns, Kevin C. (3 October 2014). The Legendary 'Lugs Branigan' – Ireland's Most Famed Garda: How One Male became Dublin's Tough Justice Legend. Sulk & Macmillan Ltd. ISBN  – past Google Books.
  9. ^"On-message potatoes". The Irish Times.