Writer - Edna O'Brien by Fay Godwin - British Library postcard

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  • Condition : Used
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  • ID# : 93648039
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  • Start : Sat 23 Feb 2013 20:46:30 (BST)
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Seller's Description

    Postcard

  • Picture / Image:  Edna O'Brien by Fay Godwin, 1974 (photo)
  • Publisher:  The British Library, c.2010
  • Postally used:  no
  • Stamp:  n/a
  • Postmark(s):  n/a
  • Sent to:  n/a
  • Notes / condition: 

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Postage & Packing:

UK (incl. IOM, CI & BFPO): 99p

Europe: £1.60

Rest of world (inc. USA etc): £2.75

No additional charges for more than one postcard. You can buy as many postcards from me as you like and you will just pay the fee above once. (If buying postcards with other things such as books, please contact or wait for invoice before paying).

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NOTE: All postcards are sent in brand new stiffened envelopes which I have bought for the task. These are specially made to protect postcards and you may be able to re-use them. In addition there are other costs to sending so the above charge is not just for the stamp!

I will give a full refund if you are not fully satisfied with the postcard.

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Text from the free encyclopedia WIKIPEDIA may appear below to give a little background information (internal links may not  work) :

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Edna O'Brien (born 15 December 1930) is an Irish novelist, playwright, poet and short story writer whose works often revolve around the inner feelings of women, and their problems in relating to men, and to society as a whole.[1] Her first novel, The Country Girls, has been credited with introducing sexual intercourse to Ireland ""three years before the Chatterley ban and the Beatles' first LP"".[2] The book was banned, burned and denounced from the pulpit, and O'Brien left Ireland behind. She now lives in London. Philip Roth considers her “the most gifted woman now writing in English”,[3] while former President Mary Robinson regards her as “one of the great creative writers of her generation”

Edna O'Brien was born in 1930 at Tuamgraney, County Clare, Ireland, a place she would later describe as ""fervid"" and ""enclosed."" According to O'Brien, her mother was a strong, controlling woman who had emigrated temporarily to America, and worked for some time as a maid in Brooklyn, New York, for a well-off Irish-American family before returning to Ireland to raise her family. O'Brien was the youngest child of ""a strict, religious family"". In the years 1941-46 she was educated by the Sisters of Mercy - a circumstance that contributed to a ""suffocating"" childhood. ""I rebelled against the coercive and stifling religion into which I was born and bred. It was very frightening and all pervasive. I'm glad it has gone.""[5] As an adolescent she fell in love with a nun.[6]

In 1950, she was awarded a licence as pharmacist. In Ireland, she read such writers as Tolstoy, Thackeray, and F. Scott Fitzgerald.[1] In 1954, she married, against her parents' wishes, the Irish writer Ernest Gébler and the couple moved to London - ""We lived in SW 20. Sub-urb-ia.""[5] They raised two sons, Carlo (a writer) and Sasha, but the marriage was dissolved in 1964. Gébler died in 1998.

In London, she bought Introducing James Joyce by T. S. Eliot and has said that when she learned that James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man was autobiographical, it made her realise ""where she might turn, should she want to write herself: 'Unhappy houses are a very good incubation for stories.'""[5] In London she started work as a reader for Hutchinson where, on the basis of her reports, she was commissioned, for £25, to write a novel. She published her first book, The Country Girls, in 1960.

This was the first part of a trilogy of novels (later collected as The Country Girls Trilogy), which included The Lonely Girl (1962) and Girls in Their Married Bliss (1964). Shortly after their publication, these books were banned and, in some cases burned, in her native country due to their frank portrayals of the sex lives of their characters. In the 1960s, she was a patient of R. D. Laing: ""I thought he might be able to help me. He couldn't do that - he was too mad himself - but he opened doors"", she later said.[5] Her novel, A Pagan Place (1970), was about her repressive childhood. Her parents were vehemently against all things related to literature; her mother strongly disapproved of her daughter's career as a writer. Once when her mother found a Seán O'Casey in her daughter's possession she tried to burn it.[1]

In 1981, she wrote a play, Virginia, about Virginia Woolf and it was staged originally in Canada and subsequently in the West End of London at the Theatre Royal Haymarket with Maggie Smith and directed by Robin Phillips. It was staged at The Public Theater in New York in spring 1985. Other notable works include a biography of James Joyce, published in 1999, and one of the poet Lord Byron, Byron in Love (2009). House of Splendid Isolation (1994), her novel about a terrorist who goes on the run (part of her research involved visiting Irish republican Dominic McGlinchey, later shot dead, whom she called ""a grave and reflective man""), marked a new phase in her writing career. Down by the River (1996) concerned an under-age rape victim who sought an abortion in England, the ""Miss X case"". In the Forest (2002) dealt with the real-life case of Brendan O'Donnell, who abducted and murdered a woman, her three-year-old son, and a priest, in rural Ireland.[5]

She has received numerous awards for her works, including a Kingsley Amis Award in 1962 (for The Country Girls), the Yorkshire Post Book Award in 1970 (for A Pagan Place), and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize in 1990 for Lantern Slides. In 2006, O'Brien was appointed adjunct professor of English Literature in University College, Dublin.[7] In 2009, she was honoured with the Bob Hughes Lifetime Achievement Award at a special ceremony for the year’s Irish Book Awards in Dublin.[8]

 

type=printed postcards

theme=people

sub-theme=writers

number of items=single

period=1945 - present

postage condition=unposted

Listing Information

Listing TypeGallery Listing
Listing ID#93648039
Start TimeSat 23 Feb 2013 20:46:30 (BST)
Close TimeRun Until Sold
Starting BidFixed Price (no bidding)
Item ConditionUsed
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Quantity1
LocationUnited Kingdom
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