"An inspired performer" The Irish Post (London) 16/6/90
"A master storyteller" Belfast Newsletter 19/8/88
"Not your picturesque Irish storyteller, nor does he want to be." Boston Irish Echo 13/10/84
"Scéalaí slachtmhar" Anois 30/6/85
"Eddie's stories are not for the faint-hearted, but then good stories never are." RTE Guide 20/6/86
"If you're looking for good story-telling in a classical style and setting then look no further than Eddie Lenihan." Irish Examiner 12/12/98
"Prolific in his output." Ireland's Own Dec 2000
"Duine de na scéalaithe Béarla is fearr in Éirinn é Eddie." Foinse 22/4/01
"One of the few traditional storytellers--seanchai in Gaelic--still working in Ireland." New York Times, 15/6/99
This site was last updated on August 31, 2002
But what viewers did not know was that he had already by then 6 books behind him, as well as 5 audio tapes, besides years of folklore-gathering, particularly in his native Co. Kerry, but also in many other parts of Ireland. It is this love of mixing with, listening to older generations (which he still keeps to this very day) that underpins everything he does, and after 27 years of collecting, he now possesses probably the largest tape-library in private hands in Ireland - a unique resource of irreplaceable material that would otherwise have been lost.
In gratitude to the excellent storytellers who have shared their proud and ancient Irish tradition with him down the years - and who were so insistent that it should not die - Eddie has done his best, through personal appearances, as well as books, tapes, CDs and video, to spread the wonderful message of Irish lore - no difficult task, since its own very depth and scope make it a world unparalleled.