Monday, June 27, 2011

Maeve Binchy2


Short story collections [5]

Binchy has also published several short story collections, including:

[edit]Other works

[edit]See also

[edit]References

[edit]External links

Maeve Binchy1


Maeve Binchy (born 28 May 1940 DalkeyCounty Dublin)[1][2] is an Irish novelistnewspaper columnist and speaker. Educated at University College Dublin,[1][2] she worked as a teacher[2][3] then a journalist at The Irish Times[2] and later became a writer of novels andshort stories.
Many of her novels are set in Ireland, dealing with the tensions between urban and rural life, the contrasts between England and Ireland, and the dramatic changes in Ireland betweenWorld War II and the present day.
Her novel Circle of Friends was made into a 1995 Hollywood movie starring Chris O'Donnelland Minnie Driver with a radical change of ending.[4]
Binchy announced in 2000 that she would not be going on tours with any more novels, but would be devoting her time to other activities, and to her husband, Gordon Snell, a children's author. She has written five further novels since then — QuentinsNights of Rain and Stars,Whitethorn WoodsHeart and Soul and Minding Frankie (2010). She lives in Dalkey, not far from where she grew up.[5]
In 1978, Binchy won a Jacob's Award for her RTÉ play, Deeply Regretted By. A second award went to the lead actor, Donall Farmer. A 1993 photograph of her by Richard Whitehead belongs to the collection of the National Portrait Gallery (London)[6] and a painting of her by Maeve McCarthy, commissioned in 2005, is on display in the National Gallery of Ireland.[7]

Themes

While some novels are complete stories (Circle of FriendsLight a Penny Candle) many of her novels revolve around a cast of interrelated characters (The Copper BeechSilver WeddingThe Lilac BusEvening ClassHeart and Soul). Her later novels, Evening ClassScarlet FeatherQuentins, and Tara Road, feature a continuum of recurring characters..

[edit]Bibliography

[edit]Novels [5]