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Frank O'Connor

Frank O'Connor (born Michael Francis O'Donovan; 17 September 1903 – 10 March 1966) was an Irish author and translator. He wrote poetry (original and translations from Irish), dramatic works, memoirs, journalistic columns and features on aspects of Irish culture and history, criticism, long and short fiction (novels and short stories), biography, and travel books. He is most widely known for his more than 150 short stories and for his memoirs. The Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award was named in his honour.

Frank O'Connor
BornMichael Francis O'Donovan
(1903-09-17)17 September 1903
Cork, Ireland
Died10 March 1966(1966-03-10) (aged 62)
Dublin, Ireland
Occupationwriter, professor
Spouse
(m. 1939; div. 1953)
Harriet Rich
(m. 1953)
Military Service
Service/branchIrish Republican Army
Anti-Treaty IRA
Battles/warsIrish War of Independence
Irish Civil War

Early life edit

Raised in Cork, he was the only child of Minnie (née O'Connor) and Michael O'Donovan.[1] He attended Saint Patrick’s School on Gardiner's Hill. One teacher, Daniel Corkery, introduced O'Connor's class to the Irish language and poetry and deeply influenced the young pupil.[2] He later attended North Monastery Christian Brothers School.

O'Connor's early life was marked by his father's alcoholism, debt, and ill-treatment of his mother. His childhood was strongly shaped by his mother, who supplied much of the family's income by cleaning houses, his father being unable to keep steady employment due to alcoholism. O'Connor adored his mother and was bitterly resentful of his father. In his memoirs, he recalled his childhood as "those terrible years",[3] and admitted that he had never been able to forgive his father for his abuse of himself and his mother.[4] When his mother was seventy, O'Connor was horrified to learn from his own doctor that she had suffered for years from chronic appendicitis, which she had endured with great stoicism, as she had never had the time nor the money to see a doctor.[5]

Irish nationalism edit

In 1918 O'Connor joined the First Brigade of the Irish Republican Army and served in combat during the Irish War of Independence. He opposed the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 and joined the Anti-Treaty IRA during the Irish Civil War, working in a small propaganda unit in Cork City. He was one of twelve thousand Anti-Treaty combatants who were interned by the government of the new Irish Free State. In February 1923, O'Connor was imprisoned in Cork City Gaol and in April moved to Gormanston, County Meath where he was held until just before Christmas.[6] War is a major theme in most stories of O'Connor's first published collection, Guests of the Nation, 1931.

Literary career edit

Following his release from Gormanston, O'Connor took various positions including that of teacher of Irish and theatre director. Thanks to his continuing connection with Corkery, he was introduced to Lennox Robinson, then the secretary for the Carnegie Trust. Robinson was organizing rural libraries and engaged O'Connor as a trainee. O'Connor worked first in Sligo and later under Geoffrey Phibbs in Wicklow.[7]

Through Phibbs, he met and was befriended by George William Russell (Æ), who requested O'Connor to send him material for publication. Russell introduced O'Connor to most of the well-known Irish writers of the day, including W. B. Yeats, F. R. Higgins and Augusta Gregory.[8] In his memoirs, he paid tribute to both Yeats and Russell for the help and encouragement they gave him.

In December 1928, he moved to Dublin to take up the position of librarian at the Pembroke District Library.

In 1935, O'Connor became a member of the board of directors of the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, founded by Yeats and other members of the Irish National Theatre Society.[9] In 1937, he became managing director of the Abbey. Following Yeats's death in 1939, O'Connor's long-standing conflict with other board members came to a head and he left the Abbey later that year.[10]

In 1950, he accepted invitations to teach in the United States, where many of his short stories had been published in The New Yorker and won great acclaim. He spent much of the 1950s in the United States, although it was always his intention to return eventually to Ireland.[11]

Death edit

O'Connor had a stroke while teaching at Stanford University in 1961, and he later died from a heart attack in Dublin, Ireland on 10 March 1966. He was buried in Deans Grange Cemetery on 12 March 1966.[12]

Family edit

In 1939 O'Connor married Evelyn Bowen (who had previously been married to the actor Robert Speaight): they had two sons and a daughter.[13] They were divorced in 1953. O'Connor married, secondly, Harriet Rich of Baltimore, whom he met while lecturing at Northwestern University. They had one daughter.[14] Between his marriages to Bowen and Rich, he was romantically involved with Joan Knape, with whom he had a son, Oliver O'Donovan.[15]

Work edit

O'Connor was perhaps best known for his varied and comprehensive short stories but also for his work as a literary critic, essayist, travel writer, translator and biographer.[16] He was also a novelist, poet and dramatist.[17]

O'Connor's career began in 1922 and accelerated with the appearance of poetry in translation, articles on early Irish poets, book reviews by stories and original poetry. Much of this material appeared in Æ's journal Irish Statesman.

From the early 1930s following the publication of his first volume of short stories, Guests of the Nation (1931), to his death in 1966 he was a prolific writer of short stories (c. 160), translations of a wide range of Irish poetry (c. 120), plays, both alone and in collaborations (c.10), novels (2) as well as works in non-fiction covering topics in literary criticism and theory, travel, Irish culture, and biography. His work as an Irish teacher complemented his plethora of translations into English of Irish poetry, including his initially banned translation of Brian Merriman's Cúirt an Mheán Oíche (The Midnight Court). Many of O'Connor's writings were based on his own life experiences – notably his well-known The Man of the House in which he reveals childhood details concerning his early life in County Cork. The Sullivan family in this short story, like his own boyhood family, is lacking a proper father figure.

In other stories, his character Larry Delaney, in particular, is reminiscent of events in O'Connor's own life. O'Connor's experiences in the Irish War of Independence and the Irish Civil War are reflected in The Big Fellow, his biography of Irish revolutionary leader Michael Collins, published in 1937, and one of his best-known short stories, Guests of the Nation (1931), published in various forms during O'Connor's lifetime and included in Frank O'Connor – Collected Stories, published in 1981.

O'Connor's early years are recounted in An Only Child (1961), a memoir which has the immediacy of a precocious diary. U.S. President John F. Kennedy remarked anecdotally from An Only Child at the conclusion of his speech at the dedication of the Aerospace Medical Health Center in San Antonio on 21 November 1963: "Frank O'Connor, the Irish writer, tells in one of his books how, as a boy, he and his friends would make their way across the countryside, and when they came to an orchard wall that seemed too high and too doubtful to try and too difficult to permit their voyage to continue, they took off their hats and tossed them over the wall—and then they had no choice but to follow them. This nation has tossed its cap over the wall of space and we have no choice but to follow it."[18][19]

O'Connor continued his autobiography through his time with the Abbey Theatre in Dublin, which ended in 1939, in his book, My Father's Son, which was published in 1968, posthumously. It contains valuable character sketches of many of the leading Irish literary figures of the 1930s, in particular, Yeats and Russell (who wrote with the pseudonyms Æ and Æon).[20]

Frank O'Connor Festival and Prize edit

Since 2000, The Munster Literature Centre in O'Connor's hometown of Cork has run a festival dedicated to the short story form in O'Connor's name. The longest established annual festival dedicated to the short story form in an English-speaking country, it regularly hosts readings, workshops and masterclasses for contemporary practitioners of the form, as well as celebrating the work of O'Connor and other local short fiction writers such as Elizabeth Bowen, Seán Ó Faoláin and William Trevor.[21]

The festival has hosted readings by: Richard Ford, Julia O'Faolain, James Lasdun, Alasdair Gray, Dan Rhodes, Eugene McCabe, Bernard MacLaverty, Desmond Hogan, James Plunkett, Lyudmila Ulitskaya, Rebecca Miller, Anne Enright, Mike McCormack, Etgar Keret, Éilís Ní Dhuibhne, Cónal Creedon, Samrat Upadhyay, Philip Ó Ceallaigh, Rachel Sherman, David Marcus, Panos Karnezis, Nisha da Cunha, William Wall, Bret Anthony Johnston, David Means, Claire Keegan, Miranda July, Rick Moody, Jhumpa Lahiri, Yiyun Li, Julie Orringer, ZZ Packer, Simon Van Booy, Wells Tower, Charlotte Grimshaw and Kevin Barry among others.[21] It also has a tradition of encouraging younger writers at the start of their career, Jon Boilard for example.

The Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award, is awarded to the best short fiction collection published in English anywhere in the world in the year preceding the festival. The prize is also open to translated works and in the event of a translation winning the prize is divided equally between author and translator. The award is described as "the richest prize for the short story form" and at €35,000 in 2010 is one of the most valuable literary prizes for any category of literature.[21]

In popular culture edit

O’Connor's short story "Guests of the Nation" has been the basis of several films.[22] The story is set during the Irish War of Independence and chronicles the doomed friendship between the members of an I.R.A. unit and the two British Army hostages whom they are guarding.[23] The first film was a silent one, directed in 1934 by Denis Johnston and featuring Barry Fitzgerald and Cyril Cusack.[24] Neil Jordan's award-winning film The Crying Game was inspired in part by this story.

Bibliography edit

Short story collections edit

Novels edit

  • The Saint and Mary Kate (1932)
  • Dutch Interior (1940)

Autobiography edit

  • O'Connor, Frank (1961). An only child. London: Macmillan.
  • — (1968). My father's son. London: Macmillan.

Poetry edit

  • Three Old Brothers and Other Poems (1936)

Poetry from the Irish edit

  • The Wild Bird's Nest (1932)
  • Lords and Commons, Translations from the Irish (1938)
  • Lament for Art O'Leary (1940)
  • The Midnight Court (1945)
  • Kings, Lords, and Commons (1959)
  • The Little Monasteries (1963)

Irish history edit

Travel writing edit

  • Irish Miles (1947)
  • Leinster, Munster and Connaught (1950)

Criticism edit

  • The Road to Stratford (1948; revised edition published in 1960–61 in the US as Shakespeare's Progress)
  • The Mirror in the Roadway: A Study of the Modern Novel (1956)
  • The Lonely Voice: A Study of the Short Story (1962)
  • The Backward Look: A Survey of Irish Literature (1967; published in the US as A Short History of Irish Literature: A Backward Look)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Matthews, James, Voices: A Life of Frank O'Connor, Atheneum, New York, 1983, p.6.
  2. ^ O'Connor, Frank, An Only Child, London, Macmillan, 1961 (1965 ed.), Chap.12.
  3. ^ O'Connor, Frank, An Only Child, London, Macmillan, 1961 (1965 ed.), Chap.2.
  4. ^ O'Connor, Frank, My Father's Son (Pan Books edition 1971) p.136
  5. ^ My Father's Son, chapter 16 p.133
  6. ^ Matthews, James, Voices: A Life of Frank O'Connor, Atheneum, New York, 1983, pp.30–38
  7. ^ Matthews, James, Voices: A Life of Frank O'Connor, Atheneum, New York, 1983, p.39
  8. ^ Matthews, James, Voices: A Life of Frank O'Connor, Atheneum, New York, 1983, pp.41–43.
  9. ^ My Father's Son, by Frank O'Connor, Black Staff Press, (Belfast 1968), p.153.
  10. ^ My Father's Son, p. 188.
  11. ^ My Father's Son, note on the author, unnumbered
  12. ^ Frank O'Connor profile, wiu.edu; accessed 9 November 2014.
  13. ^ McKeon p.122
  14. ^ McKeon p.162
  15. ^ McLaughlin, Brighid (17 August 2003). "Perfectly Frank". Independent.ie. Irish Independent. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  16. ^ ; accessed 2006-10-26.
  17. ^ Frank O'Connor's Collected Stories, Introduction, Knopf: New York, 1981. p. xii
  18. ^ The Kennedy Library, Boston, Mass., Speech of 21 November 1963, Dedication of Aerospace Medical Health Center, San Antonio, Texas.
  19. ^ O'Connor, Frank, An Only Child, London, Macmillan, 1961 (1965 ed.), Chap.14.
  20. ^ McKeon p.174
  21. ^ a b c Munster Literature Centre Festival, munsterlit.ie; accessed 9 November 2014.
  22. ^ Frank O’Connor at IMDb
  23. ^ McKeon p.80
  24. ^ Guests of the Nation at IMDb  

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Profile 17 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, frankoconnor.ucc.ie; accessed 8 November 2014.
  • THE CORK CITY – FRANK O'CONNOR SHORT STORY AWARD 12 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Non-profit arts organisation The Munster Literature Centre – Frank O'Connor House, 84 Douglas Street, Cork, Ireland.
  • Frank O'Connor: Critical Essays; amazon.com; accessed 9 November 2014.
  • Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award; accessed 9 November 2014
  • Beyond Appearances, usna.edu; accessed 9 November 2014
  • , munsterlit.ie; accessed 9 November 2014.
  • Anthony Whittier (Autumn–Winter 1957). "Frank O'Connor, The Art of Fiction No. 19". The Paris Review. Autumn-Winter 1957 (17).
  • ; accessed 9 November 2014.
  • Frank O'Connor at IMDb

frank, connor, this, article, about, writer, other, people, disambiguation, michael, donovan, redirects, here, psychiatric, genetics, researcher, michael, donovan, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, ci. This article is about the writer For other people see Frank O Connor disambiguation Michael O Donovan redirects here For the psychiatric genetics researcher see Michael C O Donovan This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2014 Learn how and when to remove this message Frank O Connor born Michael Francis O Donovan 17 September 1903 10 March 1966 was an Irish author and translator He wrote poetry original and translations from Irish dramatic works memoirs journalistic columns and features on aspects of Irish culture and history criticism long and short fiction novels and short stories biography and travel books He is most widely known for his more than 150 short stories and for his memoirs The Frank O Connor International Short Story Award was named in his honour Frank O ConnorBornMichael Francis O Donovan 1903 09 17 17 September 1903Cork IrelandDied10 March 1966 1966 03 10 aged 62 Dublin IrelandOccupationwriter professorSpouseEvelyn Bowen m 1939 div 1953 wbr Harriet Rich m 1953 wbr Military ServiceService wbr branchIrish Republican Army Anti Treaty IRABattles warsIrish War of Independence Irish Civil War Contents 1 Early life 2 Irish nationalism 3 Literary career 4 Death 5 Family 6 Work 7 Frank O Connor Festival and Prize 8 In popular culture 9 Bibliography 9 1 Short story collections 9 2 Novels 9 3 Autobiography 9 4 Poetry 9 5 Poetry from the Irish 9 6 Irish history 9 7 Travel writing 9 8 Criticism 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life editRaised in Cork he was the only child of Minnie nee O Connor and Michael O Donovan 1 He attended Saint Patrick s School on Gardiner s Hill One teacher Daniel Corkery introduced O Connor s class to the Irish language and poetry and deeply influenced the young pupil 2 He later attended North Monastery Christian Brothers School O Connor s early life was marked by his father s alcoholism debt and ill treatment of his mother His childhood was strongly shaped by his mother who supplied much of the family s income by cleaning houses his father being unable to keep steady employment due to alcoholism O Connor adored his mother and was bitterly resentful of his father In his memoirs he recalled his childhood as those terrible years 3 and admitted that he had never been able to forgive his father for his abuse of himself and his mother 4 When his mother was seventy O Connor was horrified to learn from his own doctor that she had suffered for years from chronic appendicitis which she had endured with great stoicism as she had never had the time nor the money to see a doctor 5 Irish nationalism editIn 1918 O Connor joined the First Brigade of the Irish Republican Army and served in combat during the Irish War of Independence He opposed the Anglo Irish Treaty of 1921 and joined the Anti Treaty IRA during the Irish Civil War working in a small propaganda unit in Cork City He was one of twelve thousand Anti Treaty combatants who were interned by the government of the new Irish Free State In February 1923 O Connor was imprisoned in Cork City Gaol and in April moved to Gormanston County Meath where he was held until just before Christmas 6 War is a major theme in most stories of O Connor s first published collection Guests of the Nation 1931 Literary career editFollowing his release from Gormanston O Connor took various positions including that of teacher of Irish and theatre director Thanks to his continuing connection with Corkery he was introduced to Lennox Robinson then the secretary for the Carnegie Trust Robinson was organizing rural libraries and engaged O Connor as a trainee O Connor worked first in Sligo and later under Geoffrey Phibbs in Wicklow 7 Through Phibbs he met and was befriended by George William Russell AE who requested O Connor to send him material for publication Russell introduced O Connor to most of the well known Irish writers of the day including W B Yeats F R Higgins and Augusta Gregory 8 In his memoirs he paid tribute to both Yeats and Russell for the help and encouragement they gave him In December 1928 he moved to Dublin to take up the position of librarian at the Pembroke District Library In 1935 O Connor became a member of the board of directors of the Abbey Theatre in Dublin founded by Yeats and other members of the Irish National Theatre Society 9 In 1937 he became managing director of the Abbey Following Yeats s death in 1939 O Connor s long standing conflict with other board members came to a head and he left the Abbey later that year 10 In 1950 he accepted invitations to teach in the United States where many of his short stories had been published in The New Yorker and won great acclaim He spent much of the 1950s in the United States although it was always his intention to return eventually to Ireland 11 Death editO Connor had a stroke while teaching at Stanford University in 1961 and he later died from a heart attack in Dublin Ireland on 10 March 1966 He was buried in Deans Grange Cemetery on 12 March 1966 12 Family editIn 1939 O Connor married Evelyn Bowen who had previously been married to the actor Robert Speaight they had two sons and a daughter 13 They were divorced in 1953 O Connor married secondly Harriet Rich of Baltimore whom he met while lecturing at Northwestern University They had one daughter 14 Between his marriages to Bowen and Rich he was romantically involved with Joan Knape with whom he had a son Oliver O Donovan 15 Work editO Connor was perhaps best known for his varied and comprehensive short stories but also for his work as a literary critic essayist travel writer translator and biographer 16 He was also a novelist poet and dramatist 17 O Connor s career began in 1922 and accelerated with the appearance of poetry in translation articles on early Irish poets book reviews by stories and original poetry Much of this material appeared in AE s journal Irish Statesman From the early 1930s following the publication of his first volume of short stories Guests of the Nation 1931 to his death in 1966 he was a prolific writer of short stories c 160 translations of a wide range of Irish poetry c 120 plays both alone and in collaborations c 10 novels 2 as well as works in non fiction covering topics in literary criticism and theory travel Irish culture and biography His work as an Irish teacher complemented his plethora of translations into English of Irish poetry including his initially banned translation of Brian Merriman s Cuirt an Mhean Oiche The Midnight Court Many of O Connor s writings were based on his own life experiences notably his well known The Man of the House in which he reveals childhood details concerning his early life in County Cork The Sullivan family in this short story like his own boyhood family is lacking a proper father figure In other stories his character Larry Delaney in particular is reminiscent of events in O Connor s own life O Connor s experiences in the Irish War of Independence and the Irish Civil War are reflected in The Big Fellow his biography of Irish revolutionary leader Michael Collins published in 1937 and one of his best known short stories Guests of the Nation 1931 published in various forms during O Connor s lifetime and included in Frank O Connor Collected Stories published in 1981 O Connor s early years are recounted in An Only Child 1961 a memoir which has the immediacy of a precocious diary U S President John F Kennedy remarked anecdotally from An Only Child at the conclusion of his speech at the dedication of the Aerospace Medical Health Center in San Antonio on 21 November 1963 Frank O Connor the Irish writer tells in one of his books how as a boy he and his friends would make their way across the countryside and when they came to an orchard wall that seemed too high and too doubtful to try and too difficult to permit their voyage to continue they took off their hats and tossed them over the wall and then they had no choice but to follow them This nation has tossed its cap over the wall of space and we have no choice but to follow it 18 19 O Connor continued his autobiography through his time with the Abbey Theatre in Dublin which ended in 1939 in his book My Father s Son which was published in 1968 posthumously It contains valuable character sketches of many of the leading Irish literary figures of the 1930s in particular Yeats and Russell who wrote with the pseudonyms AE and AEon 20 Frank O Connor Festival and Prize editSince 2000 The Munster Literature Centre in O Connor s hometown of Cork has run a festival dedicated to the short story form in O Connor s name The longest established annual festival dedicated to the short story form in an English speaking country it regularly hosts readings workshops and masterclasses for contemporary practitioners of the form as well as celebrating the work of O Connor and other local short fiction writers such as Elizabeth Bowen Sean o Faolain and William Trevor 21 The festival has hosted readings by Richard Ford Julia O Faolain James Lasdun Alasdair Gray Dan Rhodes Eugene McCabe Bernard MacLaverty Desmond Hogan James Plunkett Lyudmila Ulitskaya Rebecca Miller Anne Enright Mike McCormack Etgar Keret Eilis Ni Dhuibhne Conal Creedon Samrat Upadhyay Philip o Ceallaigh Rachel Sherman David Marcus Panos Karnezis Nisha da Cunha William Wall Bret Anthony Johnston David Means Claire Keegan Miranda July Rick Moody Jhumpa Lahiri Yiyun Li Julie Orringer ZZ Packer Simon Van Booy Wells Tower Charlotte Grimshaw and Kevin Barry among others 21 It also has a tradition of encouraging younger writers at the start of their career Jon Boilard for example The Frank O Connor International Short Story Award is awarded to the best short fiction collection published in English anywhere in the world in the year preceding the festival The prize is also open to translated works and in the event of a translation winning the prize is divided equally between author and translator The award is described as the richest prize for the short story form and at 35 000 in 2010 is one of the most valuable literary prizes for any category of literature 21 In popular culture editO Connor s short story Guests of the Nation has been the basis of several films 22 The story is set during the Irish War of Independence and chronicles the doomed friendship between the members of an I R A unit and the two British Army hostages whom they are guarding 23 The first film was a silent one directed in 1934 by Denis Johnston and featuring Barry Fitzgerald and Cyril Cusack 24 Neil Jordan s award winning film The Crying Game was inspired in part by this story Bibliography editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items September 2016 Short story collections edit Guests of the Nation 1931 including the famous title story Bones of Contention 1936 including the story The Majesty of Law a short story adapted as an episode of the 1957 film The Rising of the Moon Crab Apple Jelly 1944 The Common Chord 1947 Traveller s Samples 1951 including the classic story First Confession The Stories of Frank O Connor 1952 including the first publication of perhaps his most popular story My Oedipus Complex More Stories by Frank O Connor 1954 Domestic Relations 1957 A Set of Variations 1969 The Cornet Player Who Betrayed Ireland 1981 The Collected Stories Edited by Richard Ellmann 1981 The Collar Stories of Irish Priests 1993 A Frank O Connor Reader 1994 Novels edit The Saint and Mary Kate 1932 Dutch Interior 1940 Autobiography edit O Connor Frank 1961 An only child London Macmillan 1968 My father s son London Macmillan Poetry edit Three Old Brothers and Other Poems 1936 Poetry from the Irish edit The Wild Bird s Nest 1932 Lords and Commons Translations from the Irish 1938 Lament for Art O Leary 1940 The Midnight Court 1945 Kings Lords and Commons 1959 The Little Monasteries 1963 Irish history edit The Big Fellow biography of Michael Collins 1937 Travel writing edit Irish Miles 1947 Leinster Munster and Connaught 1950 Criticism edit The Road to Stratford 1948 revised edition published in 1960 61 in the US as Shakespeare s Progress The Mirror in the Roadway A Study of the Modern Novel 1956 The Lonely Voice A Study of the Short Story 1962 The Backward Look A Survey of Irish Literature 1967 published in the US as A Short History of Irish Literature A Backward Look See also editFrank O Connor International Short Story Award List of people on stamps of IrelandReferences edit Matthews James Voices A Life of Frank O Connor Atheneum New York 1983 p 6 O Connor Frank An Only Child London Macmillan 1961 1965 ed Chap 12 O Connor Frank An Only Child London Macmillan 1961 1965 ed Chap 2 O Connor Frank My Father s Son Pan Books edition 1971 p 136 My Father s Son chapter 16 p 133 Matthews James Voices A Life of Frank O Connor Atheneum New York 1983 pp 30 38 Matthews James Voices A Life of Frank O Connor Atheneum New York 1983 p 39 Matthews James Voices A Life of Frank O Connor Atheneum New York 1983 pp 41 43 My Father s Son by Frank O Connor Black Staff Press Belfast 1968 p 153 My Father s Son p 188 My Father s Son note on the author unnumbered Frank O Connor profile wiu edu accessed 9 November 2014 McKeon p 122 McKeon p 162 McLaughlin Brighid 17 August 2003 Perfectly Frank Independent ie Irish Independent Retrieved 20 January 2022 Frank O Connor Page accessed 2006 10 26 Frank O Connor s Collected Stories Introduction Knopf New York 1981 p xii The Kennedy Library Boston Mass Speech of 21 November 1963 Dedication of Aerospace Medical Health Center San Antonio Texas O Connor Frank An Only Child London Macmillan 1961 1965 ed Chap 14 McKeon p 174 a b c Munster Literature Centre Festival munsterlit ie accessed 9 November 2014 Frank O Connor at IMDb McKeon p 80 Guests of the Nation at IMDb nbsp Further reading editIrish Writers on Writing featuring Frank O Connor Edited by Eavan Boland Trinity University Press 2007 External links editProfile Archived 17 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine frankoconnor ucc ie accessed 8 November 2014 THE CORK CITY FRANK O CONNOR SHORT STORY AWARD Archived 12 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Non profit arts organisation The Munster Literature Centre Frank O Connor House 84 Douglas Street Cork Ireland Frank O Connor Critical Essays amazon com accessed 9 November 2014 Frank O Connor International Short Story Award accessed 9 November 2014 Beyond Appearances usna edu accessed 9 November 2014 Interview with O Connor s wife munsterlit ie accessed 9 November 2014 Anthony Whittier Autumn Winter 1957 Frank O Connor The Art of Fiction No 19 The Paris Review Autumn Winter 1957 17 Irish Writers Online page accessed 9 November 2014 Frank O Connor at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frank O 27Connor amp oldid 1189641880, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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