Sunday Miscellany: Affirmation, by Andrew Clancy Time, building and what we leave behind Sunday Miscellany • 21 hrs
Sunday Miscellany: A Wee French Air, by Cornelius Browne An artists's relations with a country where he has never been Sunday Miscellany • 16 Jul
Sunday Miscellany: Architect John Tuomey's fairytale of New York A young architect's impressions of New York, and decades later is a significant place of work and friendships Sunday Miscellany • 12 Jul
Sunday Miscellany: All You Need Is Love, by Cathy Power A family wedding, and where love is expressed through the heart and not the eye Sunday Miscellany • 11 Jul
Sunday Miscellany: The Wig, by Julie Feeney On being an artist and what to wear to be our true selves Sunday Miscellany • 10 Jul
Sunday Miscellany: Three poems, by Mícheál McCann Trying hard on a GAA pitch, house-hunting and airport farewells Sunday Miscellany • 02 Jul
Sunday Miscellany: Queen of the South, by Paul McVeigh A night out in Dumfries for two people with potential Sunday Miscellany • 01 Jul
Sunday Miscellany on an encounter with Mícheál Ó Muircheartaigh John Toal on why his encounter with the late, great broadcaster led him to believe you should never meet your heroes Sunday Miscellany • 26 Jun
Sunday Miscellany: Seeing Things, by Lucy Caldwell On childhood eye surgery, spirit animals and ways of seeing Belfast Book Festival • 26 Jun
Peekaboo, by Glenn Patterson From Sunday Miscellany: Glenn Patterson contemplates Ways of Seeing Belfast Book Festival • 28 Jun
Sunday Miscellany: A Café Called Dorice, by Oliver Sears On a family friend, Josef Cukier, stranded in London at the outbreak of WW2, and his plan to rescue his wife and two daughters, Jews … Sunday Miscellany • 18 Jun
Sunday Miscellany: The Argument for Children, by Rory Gleeson A doting father on the pros and cons of parenthood Sunday Miscellany • 18 Jun
Sunday Miscellany: Shane O'Toole on The American Embassy at 60 On meeting the architect of Dublin's "Brehon, Brutalist" masterpiece Sunday Miscellany • 27 May
Sunday Miscellany on hanging out with Thin Lizzy in Tramore Hanging out with Thin Lizzy on the bumpers in Tramore Sunday Miscellany • 27 May
Sunday Miscellany: The Batch Loaf, by Maeve Edwards On the joy of the bread whose "crust is black brown, its inside soft as thistledown" Sunday Miscellany • 23 May
Sunday Miscellany: Making A Show of Ourselves, by Pat Boran A neat patch of new floorboards - and all the world's a stage Sunday Miscellany • 20 May
Sunday Miscellany: The White Raffia Handbag, by Mary Hassett A great-aunt's sanctuary in St Kevin's Hospital in Cork Sunday Miscellany • 20 May
Sunday Miscellany: Rachael Hegarty on the 17th of May, 1974 Searing memories of getting caught up in the Dublin bombings, aged five Sunday Miscellany • 13 May
Miscellany: The Chieftains in Leisureland, by Ollie Jennings A rookie concert promoter gets his first taste of success in Galway, 1974 Sunday Miscellany • 13 May
Sunday Miscellany: You Don't Stammer When Singing On the transformational power of singing - one way in particular Sunday Miscellany • 08 May
Sunday Miscellany: Luas Lady, by Doireann Ní Bhríain Disembodied voices that guide us, and the personal significance of speaking clearly Sunday Miscellany • 07 May
Sunday Miscellany: Voyagers, a poem by Catherine Twomey A poem in memory of the late Michael Coady Sunday Miscellany • 02 May
Sunday Miscellany: Corpus Christi Varnish, by Michael Coady The late poet on always feeling at home in the world of painter/decorators (recorded as part of Kilkenny Arts Week in 2011) Sunday Miscellany • 01 May
Sunday Miscellany: Imogen Stuart: Rara Avis, by Alison Fitzgerald In memory of the late sculptor Imogen Stuart, who died last month Sunday Miscellany • 30 Apr
Sunday Miscellany: New Boots, by Paul Rouse The magnetic draw of a pair of innocuous football boots on a shop shelf Sunday Miscellany • 29 Apr