Authors who teach for
INKwell
We've assembled an amazing cast of authors to
teach for us at INKwell, and you can find out more about them here. Just click
on each one's name to read more about him/her.
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Alex
Barclay

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Born in Dublin, Alex Barclay was working as a freelance journalist
before she wrote the first three chapters of ‘Darkhouse’. She sent them to
renowned UK agent Darley Anderson who immediately called and asked for the rest. Alex had to
confess that she hadn’t written it, and, keeping it a secret to all but a few, she ditched
her job, rented six different holiday homes around Ireland and resurfaced eight months later
with the finished manuscript
Darley Anderson signed her up, sent ‘Darkhouse’ out to auction
and she signed a two book deal with Harper Collins for a high six figure advance.
‘Darkhouse’ is a dark gritty novel set in the US and Ireland and
explores how the paths of very different people can cross geographical, political, cultural
and moral boundaries simply because of the choices they make. It traces the evolution of a
killer from childhood to adulthood and the evolution of a detective from the right side of
the law to the wrong.
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Ivy
Bannister

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Ivy Bannister writes fiction, memoir, drama and poetry. A
collection of short stories, ‘Magician’, was published in 1996; and numerous other
stories have been published and broadcast, among them, ‘What Big Teeth’, which was
filmed as‘Forgetting Aphrodite’ in 2004.
Her memoir is ‘Blunt Trauma’: After the Fall of Flight 111, which was
published in Ireland (2005) and in Canada (2006).
Her plays have been produced on stage and radio in Ireland, the UK and Germany,
among them, ‘The Wilde Circus Show’ (Delaware, Proscenium Press,
1990).
A book of poems, ‘Loose Women’, is due out at the end of
2008.
Her radio credits include fifty contributions to RTE’s Sunday
Miscellany.
Awards received among many others are the:
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O.Z. Whitehead Play (1986)
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Best Play Listowel (1987)
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Hennessy Short Story (1988)
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Mobil Ireland Play (1993)
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Francis MacManus Radio Story (1999)
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Best Small Collection of Poems Listowel (2005)
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The Kent and Sussex Poetry award (2005)
Ivy Bannister is also among the distinguished writers to appear recently in New
Dubliners, a collection celebrating 100 years of James Joyce's
Dubliners. Her current projects are a novel and a new play. She lives in Dublin and New
York.
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Claudia
Carroll

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Claudia Carroll was born in Dublin and
is a graduate of UCD, the College of Music and of the Gaiety School of Acting. Since then she
has worked extensively as an actress on the Irish stage, but is probably best known for her
role as TV’s Nicola Prendergast in the long running Dublin soap opera, ‘Fair
City.’
Her first novel, ‘He Loves Me Not, He Loves Me’, was published last
year, and has since been widely translated. Her second, ‘The Last Of The Great
Romantics’ is due for publication this September.
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Paul
Carson

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Paul Carson is the author of
international bestsellers ‘Scalpel ’, ‘Cold Steel’, ‘Final Duty’, ‘Ambush ’ and
‘Betrayal’.
Born in 1949 Paul studied medicine in Trinity College Dublin, graduating with an
honours degree in Paediatrics. Not long after he moved to Australia, returning to Ireland in
1984 to establish his own practice, a specialised clinic dealing with allergy problems in
children. He now lives in south Dublin with his wife and two children.
From 1984 to 1996 Paul wrote numerous articles of medical
interest for journals, newspapers and magazines in Ireland and the UK. He published five health
books and two children’s novels and was a regular commentator on health and social issues on Irish
radio and television.
His first thriller, ‘Scalpel’ was published in 1997, became an immediate Irish Times
bestseller, spending 17 weeks at number one and a total of 33 weeks in the top five and is
being developed for television. ‘Cold Steel’ followed a year later and in 2000 ‘Final Duty’hit the bookshelves. Both were Irish Times bestsellers.
‘Ambush’(2003) was an immediate Irish Times number 1 Bestseller and held the
top spot for five weeks.
‘Betrayal’(released Aug 2005) is action packed with graphic descriptions of life in a high
security penitentiary, from it’s explosive opening to dramatic ending. And there’s a spicy
romantic angle to the hero’s chase; the doctor’s search for his girlfriend Lisa
Duggan.
Paul’s novels have been translated into over a dozen languages, from German to
Japanese. He is represented by the Darley Anderson literary agency.
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Tracy
Culleton

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Tracy Culleton was born in Dublin
in 1964. She has been writing all her life, but began her professional writing career in 2002 with
the non-fiction book ‘Simply Vegetarian’. Her fiction career began when she won the
2003 'Write A Bestseller' Competition jointly run by Poolbeg and RTE's Open House. This winning
novel, ‘Looking Good’, went on to spend three weeks in the top ten. ‘Loving
Lucy’ was published in 2004 and ‘More Than Friends’ in 2005. She is
currently working on her fourth novel, ‘Grace Under Pressure’.
Tracy has extensive experience in adult education, having worked with NALA as an
adult literacy tutor. Tracy focuses on commercial fiction, and has a special interest in the
reasons for, and the cures for, writer's block, and has written a non-fiction book about
this.
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Marita
Connon-McKenna

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Born in Dublin in 1956 Marita was always fascinated by the Famine
period in Irish history and read everything available on the subject. Hearing a radio report
of an unmarked children's grave from the Famine period found under a hawthorn tree, she
decided to write her first book, ‘Under the Hawthorn Tree’.
Published in May 1990, it was an immediate success, remaining in the Irish
Bestseller List for over two years, sold to Puffin in Britain and Holiday House in America,
and has been translated into French, Dutch, German, Danish, Swedish, Italian, Japanese and
Irish. It has been made a supplementary curriculum reader in many schools and is also used by
schools in Northern Ireland for EMU (Education through Mutual Understanding) projects.
‘Under the Hawthorn Tree’ has been filmed for RTÉ and Channel 4.
Marita went on to write several more books for children : ‘The Blue Horse’ reached No. 1 on the Bestseller List and in 1993 won the Bisto Book Of The Year
Award. ‘No Goodbye’ tells of the heartbreak of a young family when their mother leaves home. It was
recommended by Book Trust in their guide for One Parent Families. ‘Safe Harbour’ is the story of two English children evacuated from London during World War ll to
live with their grandfather in Greystones, Co Wicklow. It was shortlisted for the Bisto Book
of the Year Award, 1995. Marita's first foray into the world of fantasy, ‘In Deep Dark Wood’, was also a huge success..
Marita has won awards, including the International Reading Association Award, the
Osterreichischer Kinder und Jugendbuchpreis, the Reading Association of Ireland Award and the
Bisto Book of the Year Award.
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June
Considine

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June
Considine has written extensively for children and adults. Her twelve books for children
include the fantasy trilogy: ‘When the Luvenders Came to Merrick Town’, ‘Luvenders at the Old
Mill’ and‘Island of Luvenders’
Seven popular teen books published under the heading ‘The Beachwood
Series’ and also ‘View from a Blind Bridge’ and
‘The Glass Triangle’, are all published by Poolbeg
Press
Her adult novels, published by New Island, are:
Her work has also appeared in a number of short story anthologies for teenagers in
Ireland, the UK and US. Anthologies include: Her work has also appeared in a number of short
story anthologies for teenagers in Ireland, the UK and US. Anthologies include First
Times, Poolbeg Press, Thicker than Water, Delacorte and Orion,
Skimming, O’Brien Press, Flame Angels, Mammoth, and The
Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror, St Martin’s Press, USA
Over the years she has worked as a freelance journalist and as an editor
specialising in the fashion and craft industries - and has written scripts for children’s
television/radio, as well as participating in Sunday Miscellany.
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Daisy Cummins
Abby Green

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Living in Dublin, Abby
spent her childhood holidays in Ballybunion Co. Kerry. One summer she discovered a Mills and Boon
library book in her grandmother's bedroom. “Either my very good, catholic grandmother had picked it
up by mistake or she was a closet fan. I read it. Devoured it. And started looking out for
more. The love affair had begun.”
Devouring every available title at school, her obsession with Mills and Boon waxed and waned but
never disappeared. After school, Abby got a job as a trainee assistant film director in her gap
year - by the time the year was up she was working on a film and being paid very well, so she
deferred another year…and another…and another.
Roughly fourteen years later, Abby was still in the film business but the long
hours, dubious weather conditions (especially in Ireland!), and stressful situations had
started taking their toll when she stumbled across a guide to writing romance, and encouraged
by friends, decided to give writing for Mills and Boon a go.
Sending off three chapters and a synopsis, her first attempt
was rejected but it was a 'good' rejection, a page long letter of do's and don'ts and further
encouragement.. In March 2006, she got the call that she had sold my first manuscript and can
honestly say that her life changed. “To strive to do something, to wish and hope that your
dream might possibly be fulfilled, and then to have it be fulfilled…is a joy on a level that
i've never experienced before.”
Daisy Cummins/Abby Green recently featured on the Today With
Pat Kenny show offering advise to aspiring Mills and Boon authors as part of the Today with
Pat Kenny/RTE Guide Mills and Boon Romance Short Story Competition.
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Martina
Devlin

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Martina Devlin was born in Omagh, Co Tyrone and lived in London for seven years
before settling near the sea in Dublin. She started writing fiction in her spare time after
winning a Hennessy Literary Award for her first short story in 1996.
This was followed by four novels:
Her fifth book, ‘The Hollow Heart’, is non-fiction and was published
by Penguin in September 2005, out in paperback in June 29, 2006.
She is a columnist for the Irish Independent and the Sunday World magazine.
Occasionally she teaches creative writing on both sides of the border as an excuse not to
write herself.
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Rose
Doyle

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Rose
Doyle has been writing for most of her life, more journalism than she cares to remember as
well as thirteen novels, short stories, plays for radio, TV documentaries and short film scripts.
She has a BA Mod. in English Literature and Language from TCD, a Hennessy New Irish Writing
literary award for a short story and a Bisto Book of the Year award for ‘Goodbye Summer,
Goodbye’, her novel for teenagers.
Rose Doyle has recently joined other Irish writers writing
for the ‘Open Door’ series of literacy novellas and books published by New
Island. Just published too is ‘Trade Names’, a collection of pieces from her long
running series on Dublin's traditional traders and shopkeepers in The Irish Times.
A move to historical fiction came when she determined to write about a community of
unknown and unsung 19th. century Irishwomen. Known as Wrens, they lived bleak, unforgiven
lives on the Curragh of Kildare. Their story is told in ‘Friends Indeed.’ Her
second historical novel, ‘Fate and Tomorrow’, tells of an Irishwoman's journey
to the early 20th.Century Congo Free State. Her story links and parallels the frenzied,
changing times in both countries and the work of Sir Roger Casement and others to end
genocide and torture. Her third ‘Gambling With Darkness’ is a murder
mystery set in the unpredictable world of espionage, obsession and wartime links with Nazi
Germany which existed in neutral, World War 11 Ireland. It is also the love story of a young
Irishwoman and German doctor teaching in University College Dublin. ‘Gambling With
Darkness’ was followed by ‘Shadows will Fall’ bringing Roses’
publications to sixteen.
Her latest book, ’Heros of Jadotville: The Soldiers¹ Story’ was
published by New Island in September 2006. It tells, in the words and memories of those who
fought there, of the injustice done a group of Irish UN Soldiers in the mining town of
Jadotville, Congo in 1961 and its consequence. Unforgettably, the soldiers' story illustrates
how life, death and honour are of value only in their usefullness.
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Maeve
Friel

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Maeve Friel is the author of the popular series Witch in
Training (Harper Collins) which has been translated into a dozen languages and
is also available as a BBC audio book. Her latest book is Tiger Lily - Heroine in the
Making (Stripes), the first of a series.
Her picture books for younger readers include Felix on the
Move and Felicity Floss: Tooth Fairy. Novels for
older readers include The Lantern Moon (Poolbeg) which was awarded the
Bisto Merit Award.
Her short stories have been widely anthologised e.g. in Midnight Feast (Harper
Collins), Christmas Animal Stories (Little Tiger Press) and Scary Stories for 10 year olds
(Macmillan).
Winner of the Hennessy Award, her short stories for adults have been broadcast on
BBC and RTE radio and she has also written a non-fiction title Here
Lies - a guide to who’s buried where in Ireland.
Born in Derry, Maeve is a graduate of University College Dublin. She now divides
her time between Dublin and a small village near Valencia, Spain. She has two grown-up
children.
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Miriam
Gallagher

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Miriam Gallagher is an Irish author, playwright and
screenwriter.
Her work has been staged and screened in Ireland, Europe, USA & Canada and
translated into Irish, Dutch, Finnish and Russian.
Her published Selected Plays are :
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‘Fancy Footwork’(Dublin, Soc. Irish Playwrights, 1997, 2nd
Edition)
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‘Kalahari Blues & Other
Plays’ (Dublin, Mirage, 2006)
Her Novel ‘Song for Salamander’ was published in 2004 (Trafford,
Canada) and launched at the United Arts Club, Dublin by Macdara Woods, a leading Irish poet
who called it 'A paradigm for our times.'
Her short stories are published in several anthologies of Irish
Writing.
Her Films:
‘Gypsies’ had screenings in Ireland, UK, New
York, San Francisco and at International Children's Film Festival, Hyderabad,
India.
She received Arts Council & European Script Fund awards for ‘Girls in
Silk Kimonos’ (feature length screenplay celebrating Constance & Eva Gore
Booth)
Other awards include MHA Tv Script Award for Kevin, EU Theatre award and a Writer's
Exchange to Finland.
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Noëlle Harrison

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Noëlle Harrison was born in London in 1967. She went to the University of London
and moved to her mother’s homeland, Ireland, in 1991. While based in Dublin in the early
nineties she wrote and produced three stage plays, Northern Landscapes, Black Virgin, and
Runaway Wife, and one short film, Blue Void with her theatre company - Aurora.
In 1997 Noëlle moved to Meath and shortly afterwards won The Meath Chronicle /
Bookwise Short Story Competition. In 2002 she was short listed for the Molly Keane Creative
Writing Award and in 2003 she was short listed for The Hennessy / Sunday Tribune New Irish
Writing Award. She was awarded the Meath County Council / Tyrone Guthrie Regional Bursary
Award for 2004. She has written extensively on visual art in Ireland, contributing to various
journals and artists’ catalogues.
Noëlle’s first novel Beatrice was published in August 2004 by Tivoli/ Pan Macmillan
to considerable critical acclaim. She has been described as “a deeply impressive new voice”.
A new play The Good Sister premiered in The Ramor Theatre, Cavan in February 2005. Her second
novel, A Small Part Of Me, was published by Tivoli / Pan Macmillan in September 2005 and also
received great reviews.
Noëlle travelled to the Camargue in the south of France to research her third novel
I Remember published by Pan Macmillan in September 2008.
She lives in Oldcastle, County Meath with her son Corey.
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A.J. Healy

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A.J.was born and raised in Dublin.
By the age of three, A. J. had taken a drugs overdose (accidental*) crashed the
family car through the garage (probably accidental) and been suspended twice from school (no
accident).
When A.J. was five, his father left the family home and emigrated,
leaving his mother (Marguerite) to bring up A.J. and his younger brother alone, until she remarried
six years later - subsequently introducing another baby boy to the family (not accidental)
Having completed school and a BComm, A.J. travelled the world, working in
Australia, before taking a job with Goldman Sachs in London.
Two years later, he left Goldmans to start a brick factory in one of South Africa’s
townships. After a series of mishaps and adventures (including being held-up at gunpoint and
losing a number of lorries) A.J. returned to Europe, involving himself in a variety of
ventures.
In October 2001, at the age of 32, A.J. ditched the world of entrepreneurial
endeavour (and vice-versa) to follow his life-long passion - getting up late and writing
plays & stories.
A.J. had put aside a number of years' worth of savings to fund his writing efforts
but, due to bad luck (or complete stupidity), he lost all these savings at the start of
2002.
Slightly peeved, humbled and surviving on berries & own-label beer, A.J. shut
all financial worries from his mind and wrote ‘Tommy
Storm’.
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Kate
Holmquist

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Born in Vermont and raised in Baltimore, Maryland, Kate Holmquist followed her
heart to Ireland in the 1980s.
She is a high profile Irish Times journalist who is highly
regarded for her sensitive and nuanced writing on a range of issues. She lives in Dubiin with
her husband, journalist, broadcaster and author, Ferdia MacAnna, and their three children.
She is also the author of a memoir, ‘A Good Daughter’.
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George
Hook

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Presenter of Newstalk 106’s flagship programme ‘The Right Hook’, Cork man
George Hook is an instantly recognisable face in Irish media.
Combining hard-hitting news and current affairs with strong comment and opinion the
show is presented in George’s inimitable style, unashamedly playing to his strong
personality. He has lived a full and varied life and brings that experience to his audience
on a daily basis.
In 2005 George published his best selling autobiography ‘Time Added
On’, the success of which has been due, in no small measure, George’s ability to
connect with his audience and wear his heart on his sleeve.
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Ferdia
MacAnna

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Ferdia MacAnna is a playwright and novelist whose novels include:
- ‘The Last of the High Kings’ (London, Viking,
1991)
- The Ship Inspector’ (Viking, 1995);
- ‘Cartoon City’ (London, Headline, 2000)
The film of The Last of the High Kings was released in 1996 staring
Gabriel Bryne. A heartwarming comedy of friendship, family and first love, ‘The Last of
The High Kings’ is a coming-of-age story that helps us remember that nothing
will ever seem as serious as life did at seventeen:
It’s 1977; a time when Dublin rocked to the music of ‘Thin Lizzy’, the year ‘Elvis’
died, and the summer that 17-year-old ‘Frankie Griffin’ walked that line between leaving
school and starting his life. Frankie decides to throw himself into the last summer of his
teens with reckless abandon.
Along with his lifelong pals, Frankie’s aim is to catch the
attention of the two most beautiful girls in town, but his plans for social glory keep
running into trouble thanks to his large and eccentric family. With a thespian father, for
whom the world is a stage, a mother who claims that her son is descended from the High Kings
of Ireland and a crew of brothers and sisters that make the unpredictable seem boring, this
summer Frankie might learn more about life than he bargained for.
Starring Jared Leto (Fight Club, Girl Interrupted), Gabriel Byrne (The Usual
Suspects, Millers Crossing), Catherine OíHara (A Mighty Wind, Waiting For
Guffman).
Ferdia also edited ‘The Penguin Book of Comic Irish
Writing’ (London, Penguin, 1996), and has published a memoir, ‘Bald Head, A
Cancer Story’ (Dublin, Raven Arts Press, Letters from the New Island series,
1988).
In 1991 he joined RTÉ as a producer/director and worked on programmes including
'Cursaí', 'Upwardly Mobile' and 'Fair City'. In the 1970s and early 1980s, he was better
known as Rocky de Valera, lead singer with The Gravediggers and later The Rhythm Kings. He
lives in Dublin.
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Monica
McInerney

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Australian-born Monica McInerney is the author of the best-selling novels ‘Those
Faraday Girls’ (‘The Faraday Girls’ in the USA), ‘Family
Baggage’, ‘The Alphabet Sisters’, ‘Spin the Bottle’ (‘Greetings from
Somewhere Else’ in the USA), ‘Upside Down Inside Out’ and ‘A Taste
for It’, and a short story collection ‘All Together Now’, published
internationally and in translation.
Her articles and short stories have appeared in newspapers, magazines and
anthologies in Australia, the UK and Ireland. Her most recent novel, ‘Those Faraday Girls’,
won the General Fiction Book of the Year at the 2008 Australian Book Industry
Awards.
In 2006, Monica was the main ambassador for the Australian Government's Books Alive
national reading campaign, for which she wrote a limited edition novella called Odd One
Out
Monica was a book publicist for ten years, working in Ireland and
Australia and promoting authors such as Roald Dahl, Tim Winton,
Edna O'Brien and Max Fatchen and events such as the Dublin
International Writers' Festival.
She has also worked as an event manager and organiser of tourism festivals in the
Clare Valley; as a freelance writer/editor and in arts marketing in South Australia; a public
relations consultant in Tasmania; a record company press officer in Sydney; a barmaid in an
Irish music pub in London and as a temp, grapepicker, hotel cleaner, kindergym instructor and
waitress. Her first job out of school as a 17-year-old was as wardrobe girl (and later
scriptwriter) for the children’s TV show Here’s Humphrey at Channel 9 in Adelaide. She is now
a full-time writer.
For the past seventeen years she and her Irish husband have been moving back and
forth between Australia and Ireland. They currently live in Dublin.
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Oisin
McGann

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Oisin McGann started writing and illustrating stories in copybooks when he was
about six or seven, setting himself on a path that would steer him well clear of ever
obtaining of a proper job.
He signed up for a design and print foundation course in Ballyfermot Senior
College, Dublin, in 1990 and then studied animation at Dun Laoghaire School of Art and
Design. In 1992 he dropped out
of college to set himself up as a freelance illustrator/artist, serving the publishing and
design industries. In 1997, he took up a position as Background Layout Designer for Fred Wolf
films, working on the animated series of Zorro.
After completing his contract, he decided to expand his horizons and left for
London in February 1998 to seek his fortune. He found gainful employment as a
security guard, watching over trains and then hospitals.
In January 1999, he joined the M&M Consultancy, a
small advertising and design firm, as art director and soon expanded into copy writing. After
three and a half years of working in advertising he became increasingly concerned for his
immortal soul.
He returned to Ireland in the summer of 2002 much
as he had left - with no job, no home and some meagre savings. He set himself up as a
freelance illustrator once more, before getting his first books published in
2003.
Oisin now works full-time as a writer and illustrator. He lives somewhere in the
Irish countryside, where he won’t be heard shouting at his computer. He has won many
awards:
In 2008, ‘Small-Minded Giants’ was
shortlisted for the Coventry Inspiration Awards, which are open to any book, rather than just
those published in the relevant year.
In 2007, ‘Ancient Appetites’ was
shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize.
In May 2007, ‘Small-Minded Giants’ was recommended by
the Education Secretary, Alan Johnson and the School Library Association in the UK on a
one-off list of Top 160 Books For Boys (No. 44).
In 2006, ‘Under Fragile Stone’ was shortlisted for the
Bisto Book of the Year Award.
In 2006, ‘The Gods And Their Machines’, published by Tor
in the United States, was shortlisted for Locus Magazine's Best First Novel
Award.
In 2005, ‘The Gods and Their Machines’ and
‘The Harvest Tide Projec’t were both shortlisted for the Reading Association of
Ireland Award, the first time an author has had two books on the same shortlist for this
award.
In 2005, ‘The Gods and Their Machines’ won a Bisto Book of the Year
Merit Award
The complete list of his books is:
O’Brien Press
Books for 5+:
- The Baby Giant (out Spring 2009)
Books for 6+:
- Mad Grandad’s Flying Saucer - 2003
- Mad Grandad’s Robot Garden - 2003
- Mad Grandad And The Mutant River - 2005
- Mad Grandad And The Kleptoes - 2005
- Mad Grandad’s Wicked Pictures - 2007
Books for 8+:
- The Evil Hairdo - 2006
- The Poison Factory - 2006
- Wired Teeth - 2008
Novels:
- The Gods And Their Machines - 2004
- The Harvest Tide Project - 2004
- Under Fragile Stone - 2005
- Random House
- Small-Minded Giants - 2006
- Ancient Appetites - 2007
- Strangled Silence - 2008
- Barrington Stoke
- The Goblin of Tara - 2007
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Mary
Malone

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Cork novelist, Mary Malone, realized her dream of becoming a published writer when
her phone rang unexpectedly during the winter of 2005.
Mary had submitted her first book to Dodder Press the previous year and had
completely forgotten about it - she was already began working on her next novel. Her debut
novel, ‘Love Match’, is set in Kinsale (her favourite place!) and was launched in July
2006. Her second novel, ‘All You Need Is Love’, is set in Bandon and came out in
August 2007. As well as working full time Mary is a journalist who has contributed many
articles to magazines and newspapers all over the country. She has recently signed with
Poolbeg Publishers for her third book.
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Sandra
Mara

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In ‘No Job For A Woman’ Sandra Mara, Ireland’s first female private
investigator, following in the footsteps of her father Bill Kavanagh who started Irelands
first detective agency in 1947, lifts the lid on the secret life of the
nation.
An international investigator for over twenty-five years, she acted for government
agencies, multi-nationals, professional bodies and media outlets around the world. She was on
the board of the International Security Investigation Service (ISIS) - the Swiss based PI
equivalent to Interpol and was a founder member and former President of the Institute of
Investigators
Sandra was a member of numerous international organisations, including the Forensic
Science Society, the World Association of Detective (WAD) the Association of British
Investigators and the Council of International Investigators.
She was the recipient of several awards and was voted International Investigator of
the Year by the World Association of Detectives, travelling to Singapore to accept her Award.
She also won the Irish Security Association ‘Innovation Award’ for ‘outstanding work in
raising the standards in her specialised area’.
Sandra holds a masters degree in journalism from DCU and was investigative
journalist with Magill magazine for four years, exposing political and other scandals such as
the Donegal garda story. Sandra was a journalist with the Sunday Tribune and a contributor to
The Examiner and The Dubliner, as well as numerous radio and television programmes both in
Ireland and abroad. Sandra is a regular panelist on Newstalk’s Late Night
Live.
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Lia Mills

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Lia Mills is the author of two novels (Another Alice and Nothing
Simple) and a memoir, In Your Face, which tells the story of a diagnosis of oral
cancer and its treatment. She also writes short stories and literary non-fiction. An
experienced facilitator of creative writing workshops, she has worked on several public art
commissions. She is currently working on her third novel.
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Sinead
Moriarty

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Sinead was born and raised in Dublin where she grew up surrounded by books. Her
mother is an author of children’s books. Growing up, Sinead says she was inspired by watching
her mother writing at the kitchen table and then being published. From that moment on, her
childhood dream was to write a novel.
After university, she went to live
in Paris and then London. It was at the age of thirty, while working as a journalist in
London that she began to write creatively in her spare time - after work, at lunch times
….and, truth be told, during work hours.
After a couple of years toying with ideas, she joined a creative writing group and
began to write The Baby Trail. The bitter-sweet comedy of a couple struggling to
conceive hit a nerve in publishing circles. It was snapped up by Penguin publishing in the UK
and Ireland and has, to date, been translated into twenty languages.
Since writing The Baby Trail, Sinead has moved back to Dublin where she
lives with her husband and her two young sons.
Her second book A Perfect Match has been published
worldwide. The US version of A Perfect Match is called The Right Fit.
Her third novel - From Here to Maternity - is the final instalment of the Emma and
James trilogy.
Her fourth book - In My Sister's Shoes - has just been
published.
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Beth
Morrissey

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Beth Morissey is a freelance writer currently living in Dublin, Ireland. Prior
to landing in the Emerald Isle, Beth lived in America, England and Singapore, and she is
thankful everyday for her globetrotting opportunities.
Beth has written over 300 articles for international print and online publication
and uses her Masters Degree in Library and Information Studies to research for both
individuals and organizations. Currently, Beth is expanding her horizons by teaching adult
education courses in the Dublin area, and in her spare time, enjoys volunteering with
children and literacy initiatives.
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Eilis Ni
Dhuibhne

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Eilis Ni Dhuibhne is a novelist, short story writer, and
playwright.
Her work has received many awards - the Stewart Parker Award for Drama, the Butler
Award for Prose, several Bisto Awards for children's books, and Oireachtas awards for writing
in Irish. The Dancers Dancing was shorltisted for the Orange Prize in 2000.
Eilis has taught creative writing over many years, facilitating workshops in the
Irish Writers' Centre, Peoples' College, Listowel Writers' Week, and other venues. She has been
writer in residence at the Oscar Wilde Centre, Trinity College, and currently conducts creative
writing workshops on the MA in Creative Writing in UCD. Eilis is also a member of Aosdana
She has written more than twenty works of fiction, including novels ‘The Bray
House’ ,’The Dancers Dancing’, ‘Fox’, and ‘Swallow Scarecrow’.
Her short story collections include:
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Anita
Notaro

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Anita Notaro is a TV producer, journalist and director, who worked for RTÉ for
eighteen years. She has directed the Eurovision Song Contest and the Irish General Election,
as well as programmes for the BBC and Channel 4.
Take a Look at Me Now by Anita
Notaro was shortlisted for the Galaxy Irish Popular Fiction Book of the Year in the Irish Book
Awards.
Take a Look at Me Now her
fourth novel, which was published to great critical acclaim in October 2007 went on to reach number
three in the Irish Book Charts.
The shortlist of just six books includes some of the most renowned authors of
popular fiction in Ireland today, such as Sheila O’Flanagan and Ross O’Carroll-Kelly. The
Irish Book Awards were established in 2006 with the aim of promoting and celebrating
excellence in Irish writing.
Novels by Anita Notaro:
- Back After the Break (2003)
- Behind the Scenes (2004)
- The WWW Club (2005)
- Take a Look at Me Now (2007)
- No Ordinary Love (2009)
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Patricia
O'Reilly

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Patricia O’Reilly’s latest book ‘Writing for
Success’ was written to help first-time writers; those looking for guidance on
the publishing process and as an informational dip-in for established
writers.
Her fiction which is widely translated includes ‘Time & Destiny’,
a fantasised biography of Irish designer, Eileen Gray; ‘Felicity’s
Wedding’ and ‘Once upon a Summer’.
As well as ‘Writing for Success’, her non-fiction titles are
‘Working Mothers’, ‘Earning your Living from Home’,
‘Writing for the Market’ and ‘Dying with Love’.
Patricia divides her time between researching and writing, and lecturing and
convening courses on various aspects of writing.
She has come the route of freelance journalism with features for both newspapers
and magazines at home and abroad; and has had her radio plays, documentaries, short stories
and cameo pieces produced on both RTE and the BBC.
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Julie
Parsons

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Julie Parsons is the author of five
crime novels, all psychological thrillers.
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Mary, Mary
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The Courtship Gift
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Eager to Please
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The Guilty Heart
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The Hourglass
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Jonathan
Stroud

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Jonathan Stroud is the New York Times International Best Selling author of
the‘Bartimeaus Trilogy’. He left university without a clue what to do, but
got an editorial job at Walker Books in London, and began to learn about children's
books.
For several years he worked as an editor: helping authors with their ideas and
their texts, consulting with designers and artists about the visual side, helping to create
books of many kinds. He also worked on encyclopaedias, history books, game books and even a
children's Bible.
This taught him a lot of things about structure, pace and style; meanwhile, in his
free time, he was busy writing. He did several puzzle books for Walker, and began working on
a novel too.
When ‘Buried Fire’ was published in 1999, he knew that he had
found what he truly wanted to do, but it took until 2001 before he finally took the plunge,
gave up being an editor and began to write full time. Between 2003 and 2005 he
published‘The Bartimaeus Trilogy’ consisting of ‘The Amulet of
Samarkand’, ‘The Golem’s Eye’ and ‘Ptolemy’s Gate’.
These are his most popular books, and are being published in 38 countries
worldwide.
In addition to ‘The Bartimeaus Trilogy’ and ‘Burried
Fire’ Jonathan has written ‘The Last Seige’, ‘The Leap’,
‘The Viking Saga of Harri Bristlebeard’, ‘The Lost Treasure of Captain
Blood’. His latest book, due out in early 2009 is ‘Heroes of the
Valley’. His books have won many international awards. http://www.jonathanstroud.com/index.htm
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Sarah
Webb

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Sarah Webb worked in the book
business for many years and now writes full time as well as working as a children’s book
consultant.
She has written seven bestsellers:
- Three Times A Lady
- Always A Bridesmaid
- Something To Talk About
- Take A Chance
- It Had To Be You
- When The Boys Are Away
She also compiled and edited ‘Travelling Light’, a non-fiction travel
book in aid of Kisiizi Hospital in Uganda.
Sarah has also programmed and spoken at many popular and successful readers’
days.
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Trish
Wylie

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Trish Wylie is one of the few Irish Mills and Boon authors and lives in Fermanagh.
Trish Wylie is a Romantic Times Award Winner, wrote the Best First Series Romance in 2005 and
Best Silhouette Romance in 2006. She has also received the Virginia Romance Writers Holt
Medallion Award for outstanding literary talent.
Her latest book, The Firefighter's Chosen Bride is the story of
Finn and Shane who have been fighting the attraction between them for a while before Finn
manages to burn her house down and end up under Shane's roof where it's a little tougher to
fight that attraction! Known in the Modern Extra/Sexy Sensation world's as White-Hot! it won
a Cataromance Reviewers Choice Award as Best Modern Extra in the second half of 2006... and
made the Waldenbooks best seller list.
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Grace
Wynn-Jones

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Grace Wynne-Jones's feature articles have appeared in many magazines and national
papers in Ireland and in England, and her radio play Ebb Tide was
broadcast on RTE 1.
Her short stories have been published in magazines in Ireland, England and
Australia, and have also been broadcast on RTE and BBC Radio 4.
Grace is the author of four critically acclaimed
novels:
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‘Ordinary Miracles’ (Simon & Schuster/Pocket), which reached number 3 on the Irish
bestseller lists
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‘Wise Follies’ (Simon & Schuster/Pocket )
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Ready Or Not?' (Tivoli) which reached number 6 on the Irish bestseller lists and was
described as 'one of the best Irish novels this year' (Valerie Cox, Evening
Herald, 2003)
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'The Truth Club'(Tivoli), which was selected for the Barry's Tea Book Club Summer
Reading List.
Accent Press will publish new editions of all her novels in 2007. Grace has
frequently been praised for the warm belly-laugh humour and tender poignancy in her writing
and has been described as 'a novelist who tells the truth about the human heart.
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Claire Hennessey

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Claire Hennessy is author of nine young adult novels. She
was born in Dublin in 1986 and attended Trinity College Dublin. She teaches creative writing
workshops and is the editor of an online magazine for gifted teenagers. Her first book, Dear
Diary..., was written when she was twelve and published by Poolbeg shortly before her fourteenth
birthday. Her latest book Every Summer is out now.
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David Maybury

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David Maybury is a writer, reader, blogger, editor, the Oddbally nose-picking
champion 2009 and judge for the Bisto Book of the Year Awards 2010. He reads books and talks about
them at his website.
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Jacinta
McDevitt

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Jacinta McDevitt is the author of three best selling novels, ‘Sign’s On’, ‘Handle With Care’ and
‘Excess Baggage’. She has also won awards for her short stories and her stories have
been included in short story compilations, "Thirty and Fabulous”, "Party Animals" and "Mum's the
Word". She has also had a series of articles called "That's Life" published in Woman's
Way. Jacinta was short-listed for the Francis McManus Awards with her short story “Way
To Go, Dad”.
Jacinta has one non-fiction book published "Write A Book In A Year Writing Workshop &
Workbook'. For a number of years she has been giving writing workshops privately and
for public bodies such as the County Councils and libraries. The popularity of these workshops and
a demand she couldn’t keep up with led her to put her workshops into book form and so
the hugely successful "Write A Book In A Year Writing Workshop & Workbook" was born.
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