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.
Born in County Wicklow in 1968, Keegan is the youngest of a large Roman Catholic family.
She traveled to New Orleans, Louisiana, when she was 17 and studied English and political science at Loyola University.
1992
She returned to Ireland in 1992, and later lived for a year in Cardiff, Wales, where 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.
1999
Keegan's first collection of short stories, Antarctica (1999), won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature and the William Trevor Prize.
2002
She was also a 2002 Wingate Scholar and a two-time recipient of the Francis MacManus Award.
2007
Her second collection of short stories, Walk the Blue Fields, was published in 2007.
2008
She was a visiting professor at Villanova University in 2008.
Keegan has been a member of Aosdána since 2008.
2009
Keegan's 'long, short story' "Foster" won the 2009 Davy Byrnes Short Story Award.
Keegan has won the inaugural William Trevor Prize, the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, the Olive Cook Award and the Davy Byrnes Irish Writing Award 2009.
Other awards include the Hugh Leonard Bursary, the Macaulay Fellowship, the Martin Healy Prize, the Kilkenny Prize, and the Tom Gallon Award.
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.
2010
"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.
It was adapted for film by writer/director Colm Bairéad in 2021 and released as An Cailín Ciúin (The Quiet Girl) in May 2022.
The film was nominated in 2023 for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film, the first film from Ireland to be nominated in that category.
It has been nominated in a variety of categories at numerous film festivals.
In late 2021, Keegan published a novella, Small Things like These, set in Ireland in the mid-1980s.
It was shortlisted for the 2022 Booker Prize.
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.
2019
In 2019, she was appointed as Writing Fellow at Trinity College Dublin.
Pembroke College Cambridge and Trinity College Dublin selected Keegan as the 2021 Briena Staunton Visiting Fellow.
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 and the Grand Prix de L'Heroine Madame Figaro.
In March 2021, Keegan and her French translator, Jacqueline Odin, won the Francophonie Ambassadors' Literary Award.
Small Things like These won the 2022 Orwell Prize for Political Fiction.
It became the shortest book to be shortlisted for the Booker Prize at the ceremony in 2022.
It was also shortlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize.
In 2023 Keegan was named "Author of the Year" in conjunction with the Irish Book Awards.
Her book So Late in the Day was also shortlisted for the Irish "Novel of the Year" award.