Claire Keegan's works of fiction are internationally acclaimed and have been translated into thirty languages. Antarctica won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Walk the Blue Fields won the Edge Hill Prize for the finest collection of stories published in the British Isles. Foster won the Davy Byrnes Award -- the world's richest prize for a short story. Small Things Like These was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Rathbones Folio Prize. It won the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction and The Kerry Prize for Irish Novel of the Year. She was awarded Woman of the Year for Literature in Ireland, 2022, and Author of the Year, 2023.
Praise for So Late in the Day
Longlisted for the Story Prize A Barnes & Noble, San Francisco
Chronicle, and Bloomberg Best Book of the Year
An Electric Literature and Oprah Dail Best Short-Story Collection
of 2023
A Most Anticipated Book of Fall from TIME, Guardian (UK) and Marie
Claire (UK) An Amazon Best Book of November and People Magazine's
Book of the Week
"Nothing short of a masterpiece." --New York Times
"I did not think realism could be truly feminist until I saw Keegan
wield its techniques . . . When realism is more revelatory of the
world than reality itself, what can you do but feel grateful for
Keegan's mastery of it?" -- The Atlantic
"The arrival of Keegan's newest book, "So Late in the Day," offers
further confirmation of her spellbinding powers: the unpretentious
language that feels forged in a hearth, the evocation of a pastoral
but repressive Ireland, the characters whose predicaments remain
lodged in your consciousness far longer than the epic battles of
1,000-page sagas."--Los Angeles Times
"Across her oeuvre, Keegan illuminates violence better than almost
anyone, avoiding easy didacticism. She pulls apart the strands of
misogyny in individuals and institutions, diagnosing the same
problem in both . . . Throughout her career, Keegan seems to
emphasize that we take nothing with us and that all that matters is
what we give each other." --Washington Post
"Each story is as substantive as a novel, and as breathtaking."
--San Francisco Chronicle, "Favorite Fiction and Nonfiction Books
of 2023" Selection
"In spare and exact strokes, Keegan transforms these domestic
circumstances into universal mirrors. Easy to devour in a single
sitting but likely to haunt you for years." --Oprah Daily, A Best
Short-Story Collection of 2023
"A trio of brilliantly polished stories . . . In Keegan's expert
hands, even a minor skirmish--between a pushy older man and the
writer who grudgingly lets him interrupt her solitude at an
artist's residency--illuminates how the sexes so often seem to
navigate the world on completely different operating
systems."--People Magazine, Book of the Week
"The sharp observations and memories of Keegan's characters reach
back into the inheritance and perpetuation of misogyny as well as
the objectification of women, but is done so masterfully,
naturally, and imaginatively that you may not even realize that
these ideas drive the stories until the second read. So Late in the
Day is a powerful and necessary collection for not only this day
and age, but any." --Electric Literature, A Best Short Story
Collection of the Year
"A master class in precisely crafted short fiction... Keegan's
trenchant observations explode like bombshells, bringing menace and
retribution to tales of romance delayed, denied, and even deadly."
-- Booklist, starred review
"Compact but deep explorations of human vulnerability from a master
of the form." -- Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Exquisite . . . These pristine stories demonstrate the author's
genius for economy. Keegan says in a paragraph what other writers
take entire novels to reveal." -- Publishers Weekly
"Reading Irish-born Claire Keegan is like succumbing to a drug:
eerie, hallucinogenic, time-stopping. Her simplest sentences
envelop the brain (and all the senses) in a deep, fully dimensional
dream . . . Each story is as substantive as a novel, and as
breathtaking . . . Unforgettable." --San Francisco Chronicle,
"Favorite Fiction and Nonfiction Books of 2023" Selection"Keegan
crafts intimate moral tales that resonate across centuries of Irish
oppression. Like Rooney and Nolan, Keegan confronts the perils of
womanhood in a country historically besmirched by machismo . . . In
Keegan's fiction, the historical becomes personal, the past always
pressing down on the present, and women have the final say." --The
Globe and Mail "Impressive . . . Keegan's thrifty prose again
yields concise, substantive, and spellbinding storytelling."
--Boston Globe
"Tight, potent . . . [Keegan] has chosen her details carefully.
Everything means something . . . Her details are so natural that
readers might not immediately understand their significance. The
stories grow richer with each read . . . [These stories] have new
and powerful things to say about the ever-mystifying,
ever-colliding worlds of contemporary Irish women and the men who
stand in their way." -- Minneapolis Star Tribune
"Keegan is the kind of writer whose spare, slippery work you want
to reread . . . [her] sentences shape shift the second time 'round,
twisting themselves into a more emotionally complicated story."
--NPR
"[Keegan] creates vivid characters who shed light not only on the
complexity of gender issues but also on the hopes and despair of
being human." -- Bloomberg, A Best Book of the Year
"Each story in So Late in the Day offers readers the suspense one
might feel when walking home alone late at night. Violence lurks in
Keegan's stories, just as it does in our real world, despite it
being so late in the story of women and men." --Washington
Independent Review of Books
"It's impossible to overstate the talent of this Irish writer. Her
stories are neither happy nor sad; she taps into some unnamed
emotion that is more true, more pure . . . Gift this perfect little
triptych to everyone on your holiday list." --The Center for
Fiction"A masterclass in brevity and narrative precision . . .
Keegan's fiction is full of understated knowledge, restraint and
subtext . . . Every sentence, every dialogue is layered and
pregnant with meaning . . . So Late in the Day is proof that in the
hands of a deft, masterful writer like Keegan, a short story, or a
novella, can convey more and be more richly rewarding than many
contemporary brick-size novels." --Daily Star
"[Keegan's] slim volumes of fiction . . . are like master classes
in how to say more with less." -- Bookreporter
"[Keegan] is a superb stylist: every well-structured paragraph
contains multitudes... Incredibly engrossing... She constructs her
stories from a skeleton of inferences that rise, gloriously, to
form complex urges, crimes, desires, rebellions and, crucially,
universal truths. Each brief work is worth the wait: Keegan is
something special." -- Sunday Times (UK)
"A mini-masterpiece . . . There is nothing demonstrative about this
prose, which is not spare but restrained, strategically discharging
touches of eloquence only when needed, and not through a profusion
of descriptive detail, but through choice adjectives and verbs that
just stray from the literal . . . Keegan stands almost without
rival." -- Irish Times (UK)
"Claire Keegan is known for Tardis-like narratives that are bigger
on the inside . . . So Late in the Day illuminates misogyny across
Irish society." -- Guardian (UK)
"Claire Keegan is the queen of the miniaturists." --The Times
(UK)
"Stunning." -- Marie Claire (UK)
"[Keegan's] observations make ordinary days effulge with magic." --
BookBrowse
"[Keegan] is an expert on the territory that spreads between hope
and despair." -- Post and Courier "Exquisite." -- Daily Mail
(UK)
"There aren't enough words in the universe to fully describe quite
how affecting this little book is... As with all of Keegan's work
the pace is perfectly measured, like a relaxed heartbeat... Each
sentence, each word is meticulously placed.... As always, Keegan
describes the domestic quotidian in beautiful detail, elevating it
- women's work - to an art form... This is a treasure of a book."
-- Sunday Independent (UK)
"Astonishing... perfect." -- Prima (UK)
"The stories' premises evoke classic Hollywood--the end of an
affair, a chance encounter, a passionate weekend--but Keegan twists
expectations in ways that not even Cary Grant could unravel." --
Chapter 16
Praise for Foster
"Claire Keegan's beautiful new novella, Foster, is no less likely
to move you than any heaping 400-page tome you'll read this year...
Keegan's novella is a master class in child narration. The voice
resists the default precociousness, and walks the perfect balance
between naïveté and acute emotional intelligence... Like a great,
long Ishiguro novel, Keegan makes us complicit in what her
characters want, setting us up for utter heartbreak when they don't
get it." -- New York Times
"Keegan's work takes me back to when I first experienced the
palpable thrill of entering an author's world. Her sentences are so
artfully honed but so free of artifice they feel as rough and
verdant as sprigs of fresh heather...I don't want to say anything
more about Foster, except 'Read it.'" -- Ron Charles, Washington
Post Book Club
"Keegan's output is scarce and her stories are as spare as they are
heartrending, whittled down to the essential. If she has published
anything that isn't perfect, I haven't seen it... More than most
books four times its size, Foster does several of the things we ask
of great literature: It expands our world, diverting our attention
outward, and it opens up our hearts and minds. This is a small book
with a miraculously outsized impact." -- NPR
"Foster is exactly as sad as you imagine it would be, but more
stunningly alive than you have any right to expect. Its language
settles in your belly and then your bones only seconds after it has
passed your eyes... Keegan's world is lush and full, the details
delicately made, ever more rewarding and engaging with every
read... While the scale of her story is modest -- this one small
girl, this short stretch of time -- the scope of what Keegan can
hold inside of it -- the ache of living, the flash of seeing
finally what we don't have, the mourning for all we'll never be --
is as big, brash and ambitious as a story might be." -- Los Angeles
Times
"Enchanting... a study of familial heartache and generosity." --
Washington Post
"The austere style and measured pacing of "Foster" is perfect...
[A] matchless novella." -- Wall Street Journal "Balancing Keegan's
delicate, sparing prose and masterful ear for dialogue with a tale
that is almost overwhelming in its tenderness, Foster is a
heart-wrenching treasure of a book that only serves to confirm
Keegan's place as one of contemporary Irish literature's leading
lights." -- Vogue, The Best Books to Read this Fall
Praise for Small Things Like These
"For all her earlier accolades, Small Things Like These, Keegan's
first novel, enters the world this month with the shocking force of
a debut...Over what would amount to a couple of chapters in another
novel, Keegan manages to place her characters and her readers at
the center of an essential human dilemma: Will we turn a blind eye
to evil in our midst, or will we take some action against it, even
if it consists of just one small thing? As Keegan's concise,
capacious new book demonstrates, little acts can lead to real
change."--Los Angeles Times
"Keegan's precisely considered details about character, setting,
memory, and dramatic moment create a story you will want to read
again and again. Her deceptively simple language is
pitch-perfect."--Boston Globe
"This exquisite miniature of a novel somehow defies the
gravitational pull of its grim subject to hover in a quotidian,
luminous present. Details materialize with preternatural clarity.
The milky light of a winter afternoon, mist on a river, a woman
opening an oven door, a child taking her father's hand: We see
these things and feel their lingering presence as we are drawn into
the life of an unassuming man in an unremarkable place."--The Wall
Street Journal
"Claire Keegan...now gives us her best work yet. Small Things Like
These is a short, wrenching, thoroughly brilliant novel mapping the
path of one man's conscience, its torment and vacillation between
two courses of action. Either one bears a price...Spare and potent,
this is a remarkable story." --Minneapolis Star Tribune
"A sparse, breathtaking perfect gem of a novel."--People
"Small Things Like These is a hypnotic and electrifying Irish tale
that transcends country, transcends time. Claire Keegan's sentences
make my heart pound and my knees buckle and I will always read
everything she writes."--Lily King, author of Writers & Lovers
"A book that makes you excited to discover everything its author
has ever written... Absolutely beautiful."--Douglas Stuart, author
of Shuggie Bain
"Marvellous -- exact and icy and loving all at once."--Sarah Moss,
author of Ghost Wall
Praise for Walk the Blue Fields
"Perfect short stories . . . flawless structure . . . What makes
this collection a particular joy is the run and pleasure of the
language." -- Anne Enright, The Guardian
"The best stories here are so textured and moving, so universal but
utterly distinctive, that it's easy to imagine readers savoring
them many years from now." -- New York Times Book Review
"[A] stunning second collection . . . Keegan's stories are the
literary counterparts to Picasso's Blue Period paintings. . . .
Keegan's first collection, Antarctica, led to comparisons with
Raymond Carver, but Annie Proulx, with her distilled, poetic prose
and attunement to remote landscapes, is a closer match." -- San
Francisco Chronicle
"These short fictions by the Irish author Claire Keegan haven't a
style so much as a microclimate, a chill mist blowing in on a hard
wind off the sea. . . . The author's own storytelling powers have
darkened and matured since her first collection, as she takes
confident command of her craft." - The Boston Globe
"Hope lurks somewhere in almost all [Keegan's] stories. . . . You
start out on the paths of these simple, rural lives, and not long
into each, some bit of rage or unforgivable transgression bubbles
up . . . Then the truly amazing happens: Life goes on, limps along,
heads for some new chance at beauty." - Los Angeles Times Book
Review
"A note-perfect short story is something a very few people can
produce. The Irish writer Claire Keegan does it in her second
collection of stories. . . . Immaculate structure, a lovely, easy
flow of language, and a certain stony-eyed realism about human
experience; she is very much part of an Irish tradition, but a
unique craftswoman for all that." -Hilary Mantel, New Statesman
"These stories are pure magic. They add, using grace, intelligence
and an extraordinary ear for rhythm, to the distinguished tradition
of the Irish short story. They deal with Ireland now, but have a
sort of timeless edge to them, making Claire Keegan both an
original and a canonical presence in Irish fiction." -- Colm
Tóibín, author of Brooklyn
Praise for Antarctica
"That Keegan has a knack for story-telling is proved many times
over, in stories that reject the parable approach for a more
informal, intimate style. . . . Her ear seems to tune in to the
rhythms of life with enviably direct phrasing." -- The New York
Times Book Review
"Reading these stories is like coming upon work by Ann Beattie or
Raymond Carver at the start of their careers." --Los Angeles Times
Book Review
"Antarctica is an appropriate title from these spare and chilly
stories by the up-and-coming Irish writer Claire Keegan. . . .
Keegan [is] an authentic talent with a gimlet eye and a distinctive
voice." -- The Boston Globe
"In her debut collection, Keegan transcends well-worn themes of
adultery and family discord, fashioning resonant stories with
fairy-tale simplicity." --Newsweek
"Beautifully crafted, sometimes horrific, often very funny; these
are some of the best stories I've read in years." --Roddy Doyle,
author of Life Without Children
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