Articles

  • Aug 25, 2024 | fivebooks.com | Percival L. Everett |Miranda July |Andrew O'Hagan |Claire Kilroy

    The perfect book club read is a novel that will appeal to a broad audience, touch on talking point issues, and feel like a worthwhile investment of time. Literary quality is—to some extent—subjective, but we’ve avoided the crowd-pleasing ‘easy reads’ that tend to populate lists like this. Life is busy, and not everyone has the time or inclination to sit down with a doorstopper every month.

  • Jul 26, 2024 | theguardian.com | Claire Kilroy

    My earliest reading memory Anna Sewell’s Black Beauty when I was about eight or nine, sitting in the back of my mother’s parked Mini one hot summer’s day, my legs burning on the red vinyl seat, and bawling because they were putting the bearing rein on Ginger. I learned two things: empathy for living creatures and the power of the first-person narrator. My favourite book as a child Marvin K Mooney Will You Please Go Now! by Dr Seuss.

  • Jun 25, 2024 | audiofilemagazine.com | Claire Kilroy

    This novel, short-listed for the Woman's Book Prize, details a young mother's fatigue, frustrations, and joys at raising a trying infant who becomes a willful toddler. Simone Collins's narration benefits from her intimate and persuasive tone, as well as the lovely lilt of her Irish accent. Her performance resonates as her tone, pace, and intonation reveal the struggling mom's love.

  • Jun 10, 2024 | yahoo.com | Claire Kilroy

    "Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."Creating Motherhood is a collection of stories focused on the intersection of family and creativity and how to live an artful life as a parent. The following excerpt is from Claire Kilroy’s Soldier Sailor, a novel that explores what is lost as well as what is gained in motherhood.

  • Jun 6, 2024 | lithub.com | Claire Kilroy

    My novel, Soldier Sailor, was recently shortlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction. When I started writing, I did not fully appreciate the need for the Women’s Prize. Creativity, unlike sport, was not limited by physical strength or speed. A woman could write as well as a man. Did this prize suggest that women were somehow weaker writers than men? Article continues belowThen in 2012 I became a mother. Just as a gender pay gap exists for full-time work, , and that hit me hard.

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