| Irish poet Pat Boran Receives 12th O’Shaughnessy
Award
Irish
poet Pat Boran of Dublin received
the 12th annual Lawrence O'Shaughnessy Award for Poetry from the University
of St. Thomas Center for Irish Studies.
Boran was born in Portlaoise, Ireland, in 1963, and currently lives
in Dublin, where he has been Writer-in-Residence with Dublin City Libraries,
Dublin Corp. and Dublin City University. He also is program director of
the Dublin Writers Festival. In 2005 he became director of Dedalus Press,
a premier publisher of contemporary poetry from Ireland. He has published
four collections of poetry, including The Unwound Clock, which won
the 1989 Patrick Kavanagh Award for an outstanding first book, and Familiar
Things (1993), The Shape of Water (1996) and As the Hand,
the Glove (2001), all published by Dedalus.
He also is author of a book of short fiction for children, All the
Way From China (Poolbeg Press, 1998), and two nonfiction works, The
Portable Creative Writing Workshop (Salmon Publishing, 1999) and A
Short History of Dublin (Mercier, 2000). Boran also regularly reviews
for Irish newspapers and literary journals. In 2005, Salt Publishing in
England published his New and Selected Poems, which since has been
reissued by Dedalus Press.
Born writes frequently about his childhood in a quiet Irish town and
of the suggestion of mystery that can be found in daily routines. Dennis
O’Driscoll, winner of the 2006 O’Shaughnessy Poetry Award, called Boran
a "spirited celebrator of the local and the known."
Boran read from his work at the John Roach Center for the Liberal Arts
on St. Thomas’ St. Paul campus. The free public reading capped a week of
events, classroom visits and public appearances by the poet.
Boran also participated in a public conversation with poet Jim Moore
of Hamline University on the topic of "Finding the Universal of the Local."
Moore is the author of six collections of poetry, the most recent of which
is Lightning at Dinner (Graywolf Press, 2007), and has received
numerous awards, including fellowships from the McKnight Foundation, The
Loft and the Bush Foundation. Both events were co-sponsored by the Friends
of the St. Paul Public Library, a nonprofit group that advocates for the
library and promotes greater public awareness of the library’s resources
and programs.
The $5,000 O'Shaughnessy Award for Poetry, established in 1997, honors
Irish poets. The award is named
for Lawrence O'Shaughnessy, who taught English at St. Thomas from 1948
to 1950, formerly served on the university's board of trustees and is the
retired head of the I.A. O'Shaughnessy Foundation.
Previous winners of the O’Shaughnessy Award, in addition to O’Driscoll,
are Eavan Boland, John Deane, Peter Sirr, Louis de Paor, Moya Cannon, Frank
Ormsby, Thomas McCarthy, Michael Coady, Kerry Hardie and Seán Lysaght.
 
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