Claire Keegan | |
---|---|
Born | 1968 (age 55–56) County Wicklow, Ireland |
Occupation | Short story writer |
Notable works | Antarctica Walk the Blue Fields Foster Small Things like These |
Notable awards | Rooney Prize for Irish Literature (2000) Davy Byrnes Irish Writing Award (2009) Orwell Prize for Political Fiction (2022) |
Website | |
ckfictionclinic |
Claire Keegan (born 1968) is an Irish writer known for her short stories, which have been published in The New Yorker , Best American Short Stories , Granta , and The Paris Review . She is also known for her novellas, two of which have been adapted as films.
Claire Keegan was born in 1968, and raised on a farm as one of a large family in County Wicklow, Ireland. [1]
She travelled to New Orleans, Louisiana, United States, when she was 17 and studied English and political science at Loyola University. [1] She returned to Ireland in 1992, and later lived for a year in Cardiff, Wales.[ citation needed ] There she undertook an MA in creative writing and taught undergraduates at the University of Wales. She subsequently received an M. Phil at Trinity College Dublin. [2]
Keegan's first collection of short stories, Antarctica (1999), won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature and the William Trevor Prize. [3] [4]
Her second collection of short stories, Walk the Blue Fields , was published in 2007. Keegan's 'long, short story' [5] [6] "Foster" won the 2009 Davy Byrnes Short Story Award. [7] "Foster" appeared in the 15 February 2010 issue of The New Yorker and was included in The Best American Short Stories 2011 . It was later published by Faber and Faber in a longer form. "Foster" is now included as a text for the Irish Leaving Certificate. [8] It was adapted for film by writer/director Colm Bairéad as An Cailín Ciúin (The Quiet Girl; 2022), and was nominated in 2023 for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film. [9]
In late 2021, Keegan published a novella, Small Things like These , set in Ireland in the mid-1980s. [5] [10] It was shortlisted for the 2022 Booker Prize. [11] The film adaptation, starring Cillian Murphy, Emily Watson, and Eileen Walsh, had its world premiere at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival on 15 February 2024. [12]
In February 2022 the story So Late in the Day was published in The New Yorker, [13] and was released in a hardback edition in 2023 by Faber. [14]
Keegan has won the inaugural William Trevor Prize, [15] the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, [15] the Olive Cook Award and the Davy Byrnes Irish Writing Award 2009. [15] Other awards include the Hugh Leonard Bursary, the Macaulay Fellowship, [15] the Martin Healy Prize, the Kilkenny Prize, and the Tom Gallon Award. She was also a 2002 Wingate Scholar and a two-time recipient of the Francis MacManus Award. She was a visiting professor at Villanova University in 2008. Keegan was the Ireland Fund Artist-in-Residence in the Celtic Studies Department of St. Michael's College at the University of Toronto in March 2009. [16] In 2019, she was appointed as Writing Fellow at Trinity College Dublin. [17] Pembroke College Cambridge and Trinity College Dublin selected Keegan as the 2021 Briena Staunton Visiting Fellow. [18]
The French translation of Small Things like These (Ce genre de petites choses) has been shortlisted for two prestigious awards: the Francophonie Ambassadors' Literary Award [19] and the Grand Prix de L'Heroine Madame Figaro. [20] In March 2021, Keegan and her French translator, Jacqueline Odin, won the Francophonie Ambassadors' Literary Award. [21] Small Things like These won the 2022 Orwell Prize for Political Fiction. [22] It became the shortest book to be shortlisted for the Booker Prize at the ceremony in 2022. [23] It was also shortlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize. [24]
In 2023 Keegan was named "Author of the Year" in conjunction with the Irish Book Awards. [25] [26] Her book So Late in the Day was also shortlisted for the Irish "Novel of the Year" award.[ citation needed ]
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