Kate Cruise O'Brien
Kate Cruise O'Brien (1948 – 26 March 1998) was an Irish writer.
The third and youngest child of Irish politician and diplomat Conor Cruise O'Brien, she was born in Dublin, and grew up in Howth. She went to school in Dublin and studied English in Trinity College Dublin. Her mother, Christine Foster, was born in Derry and was raised in Belfast where her father, Alec Foster, was headmaster of Belfast Royal Academy. Alec played international rugby for Ireland and the British and Irish Lions.
While still at university she published her first short story and shortly afterwards, at the age of 22 she won the Hennessy Literary Award. She graduated in 1971 and married Joseph Kearney, son of a former secretary to the Department of Defence. She returned to university to study for a Higher Diploma in Education. Unable to find a teaching post she started a small nursery for the children of working mothers.
Her first book, A Gift Horse, a collection of short stories, won her the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Seán Ó Faoláin described it as containing "the seed of genius". She later became a literary editor with the Poolbeg Press, and became well known for her canny knack of uncovering new talent.
Personal life
In 1971, she married Joseph Kearney; the couple had one child. Kate Cruise O'Brien died suddenly in 1998.
Works
- A Gift Horse, and Other Stories (1977), Poolbeg Press
- The Homesick Garden (1991), Poolbeg Press
- If Only: Short Stories of Love and Divorce (1997), Poolbeg Press (co-editor)
- In Sunshine Or in Shadow (1999), Poolbeg Press (co-editor)
Links
- Notice of death of Kate Cruise O'Brien, independent.co.uk; accessed 4 December 2015.