×


 x 

Shopping cart
8%OFFAilbhe Malone - Banshee: Mythological Irish Women Retold - 9781408749357 - 9781408749357
Stock image for illustration purposes only - book cover, edition or condition may vary.

Banshee: Mythological Irish Women Retold

€ 23.99
€ 21.99
You save € 2.00!
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Banshee: Mythological Irish Women Retold Hardciver. ***THIS IS A PRE-ORDER TO BE SHIPPED ON OR AROUND THE PUBLICATION DATE IN FEBRUARY 2026****

'A mystical, magical, empowering modern re-imagining of the Irish goddesses, I LOVED these superb stories' PATRICIA SCANLAN

In this spellbinding anthology, Ireland's most electrifying female writers breathe new life into ancient Irish myths, reclaiming the stories of women who have too long stood in the shadows of warriors and kings.

Editor and journalist Ailbhe Malone was raised on these legends - but the women, always cast as mothers, warriors or witches, were never given the lead. And so, Banshee was born: not just a retelling but a radical reclamation.

Banshee transports you to treacherous landscapes and salt-crashing seas, generational curses and mystical islands. Here you'll find unruly mothers, rule-breaking queens, and women outrunning their destiny - stories pulsing with desire, danger and defiance.

With contributions from every corner of Irish literature, Banshee features luminous re-tellings by Naoise Dolan, Megan Nolan, Jess Kidd, Wendy Erskine, Nikita Gill, Sarah Maria Griffin, Jane Casey, Anne Griffin, Sheila O'Flanagan, and Salma El-Wardany. This is a celebration of womanhood - and an homage to the ancient stories that still shape us.

Product Details

Publication date
2026
Publisher
John Murray London
Condition
New
Number of Pages
320
Format
Hardback
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781408749357
SKU
9781408749357
Shipping Time
Will be shipped on or around publication date
Ref
99-187

About Ailbhe Malone
Ailbhe Malone is Senior Editor at the Strategist (New York Magazine). She has also worked for the Guardian, Irish Times, Wired and Nylon (US). Educated at Trinity College Dublin, Ailbhe spent summers in the west of Ireland, surrounded by the foundations of legends featured in this collection. From learning about the salmon of knowledge from a seanchaí to reading Sinéad de Valera's Irish Fairy Tales under the covers at night, she gobbled up every variant of folktale she could find. Yet the women of these legends are rarely the protagonists, even in the stories named after them. Banshee asks: why not let the women lead?

Goodreads reviews for Banshee: Mythological Irish Women Retold