Belinda McKeon is an Irish writer. She is the author of two novels, Solace, which won the 2011 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, and Tender.
Life and work
McKeon was born in Longford and attended Trinity College, Dublin and University College Dublin. From 2000 to 2010 she worked for The Irish Times, writing on theatre, literature and the arts. In 2005 she moved to New York City, where she completed an MFA at Columbia University. She currently lives in Brooklyn and is Assistant Teaching Professor in Creative Writing at Rutgers University McKeon's first novel, Solace, won the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize and the Sunday IndependentBest Newcomer Award and was named Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book of the Year in 2011, as well as being shortlisted for the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. The Economist called Solace "a warm and wise debut", while The Irish Times described it as "at once a moving and gracefully etched story of human loss and interconnection set in contemporary Ireland and a deeply affecting meditation on being in the world". Her second novel Tender was published in 2015 to critical acclaim. Reviewing it for the Irish Times, author John Boyne called Tender "the best Irish novel I've read since The Spinning Heart, a work rich with wisdom, truth and beauty.", while the Guardian called it "richly nuanced and utterly absorbing." Tender was shortlisted for Novel of the Year at the 2015 Irish Book Awards. In 2015, McKeon edited A Kind of Compass: Stories on Distance, a collection of new short stories on the theme of distance by 17 international contemporary writers The collection is published by Tramp Press. McKeon is also a playwright and her produced plays include Word of Mouth, Drapes, and Graham and Frost. From 2008 to 2011, she curated the DLR Poetry Now Festival in Dun Laoghaire, Ireland and, with her husband Aengus Woods, she has curated the annual Poetry Fest at the Irish Arts Center, New York, since 2009.
Word of Mouth Drapes Two Houses Graham and Frost Dropping Slow
Editor
A Kind of Compass: Stories on Distance
Awards
2005 RTE PJ O'Connor Radio Drama Award for Word of Mouth 2006 Irish Theatre Award for Drapes as part of Fishamble Theatre Company's Whereabouts 2008 Dublin Fringe Festival Audience Choice Award for Two Houses as part of Love 2.0, along with Philip McMahon's Investment Potential 2011 Sunday Independent Best Newcomer Award at the Irish Book Awards for Solace 2011 Irish Book of the Year at the Irish Book Awards for Solace 2011 Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize for Solace 2012 Shortlist for the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Solace 2012 Shortlist for the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year for Solace 2015 Shortlist for the Eason Bookclub Novel of the Year at the Irish Book Awards for Tender 2015 Shortlist for Encore Award for best second novel for Tender.