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Kate O'Brien (novelist)

Kate O'Brien (3 December 1897 – 13 August 1974) was an Irish novelist and playwright.

Kate O'Brien
O’Brien in 1926
BornKathleen Mary Louise O'Brien
(1897-12-03)3 December 1897
Limerick City, Ireland
Died13 August 1974(1974-08-13) (aged 76)
Canterbury, England, UK
OccupationNovelist and playwright

Biography edit

Kathleen Mary Louise "Kate" O'Brien was born in Limerick City in 1897 to a middle-class family. Following the death of her mother when she was five, she joined her three older sisters as a boarder at Laurel Hill Convent becoming the youngest pupil at the school. She graduated in 1919 in English and French from the newly established University College, Dublin, and she then moved to London, where she worked as a teacher for a year.[1]

In 1922–23, she worked as a governess in Bilbao, Basque Country, in the north of Spain, where she began to write fiction.[2] Upon her return to England, O'Brien worked at the Manchester Guardian.[3] She married Dutch journalist Gustaff Reiner in 1922 but the marriage ended within a year. After the success of her play Distinguished Villa in 1926, she took to full-time writing and was awarded both the 1931 James Tait Black Prize and the Hawthornden Prize for her debut novel Without My Cloak.[citation needed]

Many of her books deal with issues of female agency and sexuality in ways that were new and radical at the time. Her 1936 novel, Mary Lavelle, was banned in Ireland and Spain, while The Land of Spices was banned in Ireland upon publication.[4] In addition to novels, she wrote plays, film scripts, short stories, essays, copious journalism, two biographical studies, and two very personal travelogues. Throughout her life, O'Brien felt a particular affinity with Spain—while her experiences in the Basque Country inspired Mary Lavelle, she also wrote a life of the Spanish mystic Teresa of Avila, and she used the relationship between the Spanish king Philip II and Maria de Mendoza to write the anti-fascist novel That Lady.[5]

Even though Kate O'Brien lived outside of Ireland for most of her adult life, the country played a crucial role in her creative output. Many of her novels are set in Ireland, in 'Mellick' which is her fictional name for Limerick. She lived in Roundstone in Connemara for a period in the 1950s. She wrote a regular newspaper column for the Irish Times entitled From a Distance which captured the ambivalent relationship she had with Ireland. In her novels after 1936, she is outspokenly critical of the conservatism of the new Irish State, particularly during the De Valera years. Her work promoted European identity, which she saw as being rooted in the Christian tradition—despite the fact that she was herself agnostic.

O'Brien wrote a political travelogue, Farewell Spain, to gather support for the leftist cause in the Spanish Civil War, and it has been argued that she was close to anarchism in the 1930s.[2] She also wrote a travelogue My Ireland (1962), where she offers a lively and engaging record of the places in Ireland that she loved (such as Connemara) or did not impress her (such as Dublin).

A feminist, her novels promoted gender equality and were mostly protagonised by young women yearning for independence. Kate O'Brien's determination to encourage a greater understanding of sexual difference — several of her books include positive gay/lesbian characters —, make her a pioneer in queer literary representation.[6] O'Brien was herself lesbian, and had a number of relationships with women, including the novelist E.M. Delafield, and the artist Mary O'Neill, who has been described as her 'life partner'.[7] She was very critical of conservatism in Ireland, and the banning of her books highlighted the Irish censorship laws. Following a debate on the banning of The Land of Spices in the Irish senate, and a campaign supported by Seán Ó Faoláin and others, the censorship laws were somewhat reformed in 1946 by creating an Appeals Board. The Land of Spices which had been banned in 1941 was 'unbanned' in 1949, but Mary Lavelle was never officially 'unbanned'. In this way, O'Brien helped bring to an end the cultural restrictions of the 1930s and 40s in the country.[8] She lived much of her life in England and died in Faversham, near Canterbury, in 1974.[citation needed] At the time of her death, she was poor and most of her books were out of print. In the 1980s, her work was recovered by feminist scholars and reprinted by feminist publishers such as Arlen House in Dublin and Virago in London. She is now considered to be a major twentieth century Irish writer.

Legacy edit

The Glucksman Library at the University of Limerick holds an important collection of O'Brien's writings.[citation needed]

In August 2005, Penguin reissued her final novel, As Music and Splendour (1958), which had been out of print for decades.

The Limerick Literary Festival in honour of Kate O’Brien (formerly the Kate O'Brien Weekend), takes place in Limerick every year, attracting academic and non-academic audiences.[9]

In the classic film Brief Encounter (1945), the co-protagonist Laura (Celia Johnson) says she has reserved "the new Kate O'Brien" at her local Boots library,[10] which prepares the audience for the moral dilemmas that the character is about to face.

Fiction edit

  • Without My Cloak (1931) – (winner of the James Tait Black Prize and Hawthornden Prize))
  • The Ante-Room (1934)
  • Mary Lavelle (1936) (adapted as the 1998 film Talk of Angels)
  • Pray for the Wanderer (1938)
  • The Land of Spices (1941)
  • The Last of Summer (1943)
  • That Lady (1946) (later a 1949 Broadway show and a 1955 movie)
  • The Flower of May (1953) - (winner of the Book of the Year award, by the Women Writers Association in Ireland)
  • As Music and Splendour (1958)
  • Constancy (two chapters of an unfinished novel were published in 1972)

Plays edit

  • Distinguished Villa: A Play in Three Acts (1926)
  • Gloria Gish (play, n.d., archive of the National Library of Ireland)
  • The Anteroom (adaptation of her novel)
  • That Lady: A Romantic Drama (adaptation of her novel, 1949)

Film scripts edit

  • Mary Magdalen (n.d., one version at the archive of the National Library of Ireland)
  • A Broken Song (n.d., Kate O'Brien Papers at University of Limerick)

Life writing edit

  • Teresa of Avila (biography, 1951)
  • Presentation Parlour (biography, 1963)
  • English Diaries and Journals (literary criticism, 1943)
  • Kate O'Brien: Self-Portrait (documentary for RTÉ television, broadcast 28 March 1962; script by Kate O'Brien)

Travel writing edit

  • Farewell Spain (political travelogue, 1937)
  • Dublin and Cork (photographic book with text by O'Brien, 1961)
  • My Ireland (travelogue, 1962)

Journalism edit

  • Long Distance (column for The Irish Times newspaper, 1967–71)
  • book reviews (see E.Walshe's Ordinary People Dancing for Listings)

Critical studies on O'Brien edit

  • John Jordan (editor): Special issue on Kate O'Brien, Stony Thursday Book, vol. 7, 1981
  • Lorna Reynolds: Kate O'Brien: A Literary Portrait (1987)
  • John Logan (editor): With Warmest Love: Lectures for Kate O'Brien 1984–93. (1994)
  • Adele M. Dalsimer: Kate O'Brien: A Critical Study (1990)
  • Éibhear Walshe (editor): Ordinary People Dancing: Essays on Kate O'Brien (1993)
  • Éibhear Walshe: Kate O'Brien: A Writing Life (2006)
  • Mary Coll (editor): Faithful Companions: Collected Essays Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the Kate O'Brien Weekend. (2009)
  • Aintzane L. Mentxaka: Kate O'Brien and the Fiction of Identity (2011)
  • Michael G. Cronin: Impure Thoughts: sexuality, Catholicism and literature in twentieth-century Ireland. Manchester: Manchester University Press. (2012)
  • Aintzane L. Mentxaka: The Postcolonial Traveller: Kate O'Brien and the Basques (2016)
  • Jane Davison: Kate O'Brien and Spanish Literary Culture (2017)
  • Paige Reynolds (editor): Special Issue on Kate O'Brien, Irish University Review (Spring/Summer 2018)

Critical essays on O'Brien edit

  • Joan Ryan: "Class and Creed in the Novels of Kate O'Brien" in M. Harmon (editor): The Irish Writer and the City (1984)
  • Lorna Reynolds: "The Image of Spain in the Novels of Kate O'Brien" in W. Zack and H Kosok (editors): National Images and Stereotypes (1988)
  • Emma Donoghue. "'Out of Order': Kate O'Brien's Lesbian Fictions". in Ordinary People Dancing: Essays on Kate O'Brien. Eibhear Walshe ed. Cork: Cork University Press, 1993, pp. 36–59.
  • Anne C. Fogarty: "The Ear of the Other: Dissident Voices in Kate O'Brien's As Music and Splendor and Mary Dorcey's A Noise From the Woodshed" in Éibhear Walshe (editor): Sex, Nation and Dissent in Irish Writing (1997)
  • Gerardine Meaney. “Territory and Transgression – History, Nationality and Sexuality in Kate O’Brien’s Fiction.” Irish Journal of Feminist Studies. Col. 2, issue 2 (December 1997): 77–92.
  • Eamon Maher: "Love and the Loss of Faith in the Novels of Kate O'Brien" in Crosscurrents and Confluences (2000)
  • Angela Ryan:"'A Franco-Irish Solution?' Francois Mauriac, Kate O' Brien and the Catholic Intellectual Novel". in France and Ireland: Anatomy of a Relationship. Ed E. Maher and G. Neville. Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 2004: 97–109.
  • Sharon Tighe-Mooney. “Sexuality and Religion in Kate O’Brien’s Novels”. Essays in Irish Literary Criticism: Gender, Sexuality, and Corporeality. Deirdre Quinn and Sharon Tighe-Mooney eds. Lewiston, New York, Queenston, and Lampeter: Edwin Mellen Press, 2008, pp. 125–140.
  • Aintzane L. Mentxaka. "La Belle – Kate O’Brien and Female Beauty". in Women, Social and Cultural Change in Twentieth Century Ireland: Dissenting Voices?. Sarah O’Connor and Christopher C. Shepard eds. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars’ Press, 2008, pp. 183– 198.
  • Aintzane L. Mentxaka. "A 'Catholic Agnostic' – Kate O’Brien”. in Breaking the Mould: Literary Representations of Irish Catholicism. Eamon Maher and Eugene O’Brien eds. Peter Lang, 2011. 87–104* Aintzane L. Mentxaka. "Politics and Feminism: The Basque Contexts of Kate O’Brien’s Mary Lavelle". in Irish University Review, Vol. 39, No. 1 (Spring/Summer 2009): 65–75.
  • Emma Donoghue. "Embraces of Love". in Faithful Companions: Collected Essays Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of The Kate O'Brien Weekend. Mary Coll ed. Limerick: Mellick Press, 2009, pp. 16–31.
  • Aintzane L. Mentxaka: “Film Into Novel: Kate O’Brien’s Modernist use of Film Techniques”. in Viewpoints: Theoretical Perspectives on Irish Visual Texts. Clare Bracken and Emma Radley eds. Cork: Cork University Press, 2013, pp. 124–36.
  • Michael G. Cronin: 'Kate O'Brien and the Erotics of Liberal Catholic Dissent'. Field Day Review, 6.(2010)
  • Michael G. Cronin: ‘‘Fantastic Longings’: The Moral Cartography of Kate O’Brien's Mary Lavelle’. In: Werner Huber, Sandra Mayer and Julia Novak (eds). Irish Studies in Europe, 4. Trier: WVT Wissenschaftlicher Verlag. (2012)

Film adaptations edit

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Irish Writers on Writing featuring Kate O'Brien. Edited by Eavan Boland (Trinity University Press, 2007).
  • "Kate O'Brien Online Archive", for scholars and fans. kate o'brien online archive

References edit

  1. ^ E. Walshe, Kate O'Brien: A Writing Life (Cork UP, 2006)
  2. ^ a b A.L. Mentxaka, Kate O'Brien and the Fiction of Identity (McFarland, 2011)
  3. ^ E. Walshe. Kate O'Brien: A Writing Life (Cork UP, 2006)
  4. ^ "What a shocker: no more books to ban". The Irish Times. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  5. ^ "St Teresa would back Madrid". Review by H S Skeffington of Farewell to Spain. Irish Democrat. 16 October 1937. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  6. ^ E. Donoghue. "'Out of Order': Kate O'Brien's Lesbian Fictions". in Ordinary People Dancing: Essays on Kate O'Brien. Eibhear Walshe ed. Cork: Cork University Press, 1993, pp. 36–59.
  7. ^ Eibhear Walshe, Kate O'Brien: A Writing Life. Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2006
  8. ^ Fischerova, Jana. “The Writer and the Censor: Czechoslovakia and Ireland; the case of Kate O’Brien and Frank O’Connor.” Unpublished paper. CAIS conference, Maynooth, 24 June 2005.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  10. ^ Dugan, page 170; Snoek-Brown, Jennifer, 'A brief encounter with a librarian', Reel Librarians (2011)

kate, brien, novelist, cyclist, kate, brien, cyclist, character, from, drew, carey, show, kate, brien, drew, carey, show, confused, with, katie, brien, kathleen, brien, katherine, brien, cathy, brien, kate, brien, december, 1897, august, 1974, irish, novelist,. For the cyclist see Kate O Brien cyclist For the character from The Drew Carey Show see Kate O Brien The Drew Carey Show Not to be confused with Katie O Brien Kathleen O Brien Katherine O Brien or Cathy O Brien Kate O Brien 3 December 1897 13 August 1974 was an Irish novelist and playwright Kate O BrienO Brien in 1926BornKathleen Mary Louise O Brien 1897 12 03 3 December 1897Limerick City IrelandDied13 August 1974 1974 08 13 aged 76 Canterbury England UKOccupationNovelist and playwright Contents 1 Biography 2 Legacy 3 Fiction 4 Plays 5 Film scripts 6 Life writing 7 Travel writing 8 Journalism 9 Critical studies on O Brien 10 Critical essays on O Brien 11 Film adaptations 12 See also 13 Further reading 14 ReferencesBiography editKathleen Mary Louise Kate O Brien was born in Limerick City in 1897 to a middle class family Following the death of her mother when she was five she joined her three older sisters as a boarder at Laurel Hill Convent becoming the youngest pupil at the school She graduated in 1919 in English and French from the newly established University College Dublin and she then moved to London where she worked as a teacher for a year 1 In 1922 23 she worked as a governess in Bilbao Basque Country in the north of Spain where she began to write fiction 2 Upon her return to England O Brien worked at the Manchester Guardian 3 She married Dutch journalist Gustaff Reiner in 1922 but the marriage ended within a year After the success of her play Distinguished Villa in 1926 she took to full time writing and was awarded both the 1931 James Tait Black Prize and the Hawthornden Prize for her debut novel Without My Cloak citation needed Many of her books deal with issues of female agency and sexuality in ways that were new and radical at the time Her 1936 novel Mary Lavelle was banned in Ireland and Spain while The Land of Spices was banned in Ireland upon publication 4 In addition to novels she wrote plays film scripts short stories essays copious journalism two biographical studies and two very personal travelogues Throughout her life O Brien felt a particular affinity with Spain while her experiences in the Basque Country inspired Mary Lavelle she also wrote a life of the Spanish mystic Teresa of Avila and she used the relationship between the Spanish king Philip II and Maria de Mendoza to write the anti fascist novel That Lady 5 Even though Kate O Brien lived outside of Ireland for most of her adult life the country played a crucial role in her creative output Many of her novels are set in Ireland in Mellick which is her fictional name for Limerick She lived in Roundstone in Connemara for a period in the 1950s She wrote a regular newspaper column for the Irish Times entitled From a Distance which captured the ambivalent relationship she had with Ireland In her novels after 1936 she is outspokenly critical of the conservatism of the new Irish State particularly during the De Valera years Her work promoted European identity which she saw as being rooted in the Christian tradition despite the fact that she was herself agnostic O Brien wrote a political travelogue Farewell Spain to gather support for the leftist cause in the Spanish Civil War and it has been argued that she was close to anarchism in the 1930s 2 She also wrote a travelogue My Ireland 1962 where she offers a lively and engaging record of the places in Ireland that she loved such as Connemara or did not impress her such as Dublin A feminist her novels promoted gender equality and were mostly protagonised by young women yearning for independence Kate O Brien s determination to encourage a greater understanding of sexual difference several of her books include positive gay lesbian characters make her a pioneer in queer literary representation 6 O Brien was herself lesbian and had a number of relationships with women including the novelist E M Delafield and the artist Mary O Neill who has been described as her life partner 7 She was very critical of conservatism in Ireland and the banning of her books highlighted the Irish censorship laws Following a debate on the banning of The Land of Spices in the Irish senate and a campaign supported by Sean o Faolain and others the censorship laws were somewhat reformed in 1946 by creating an Appeals Board The Land of Spices which had been banned in 1941 was unbanned in 1949 but Mary Lavelle was never officially unbanned In this way O Brien helped bring to an end the cultural restrictions of the 1930s and 40s in the country 8 She lived much of her life in England and died in Faversham near Canterbury in 1974 citation needed At the time of her death she was poor and most of her books were out of print In the 1980s her work was recovered by feminist scholars and reprinted by feminist publishers such as Arlen House in Dublin and Virago in London She is now considered to be a major twentieth century Irish writer Legacy editThe Glucksman Library at the University of Limerick holds an important collection of O Brien s writings citation needed In August 2005 Penguin reissued her final novel As Music and Splendour 1958 which had been out of print for decades The Limerick Literary Festival in honour of Kate O Brien formerly the Kate O Brien Weekend takes place in Limerick every year attracting academic and non academic audiences 9 In the classic film Brief Encounter 1945 the co protagonist Laura Celia Johnson says she has reserved the new Kate O Brien at her local Boots library 10 which prepares the audience for the moral dilemmas that the character is about to face Fiction editWithout My Cloak 1931 winner of the James Tait Black Prize and Hawthornden Prize The Ante Room 1934 Mary Lavelle 1936 adapted as the 1998 film Talk of Angels Pray for the Wanderer 1938 The Land of Spices 1941 The Last of Summer 1943 That Lady 1946 later a 1949 Broadway show and a 1955 movie The Flower of May 1953 winner of the Book of the Year award by the Women Writers Association in Ireland As Music and Splendour 1958 Constancy two chapters of an unfinished novel were published in 1972 Plays editDistinguished Villa A Play in Three Acts 1926 Gloria Gish play n d archive of the National Library of Ireland The Anteroom adaptation of her novel That Lady A Romantic Drama adaptation of her novel 1949 Film scripts editMary Magdalen n d one version at the archive of the National Library of Ireland A Broken Song n d Kate O Brien Papers at University of Limerick Life writing editTeresa of Avila biography 1951 Presentation Parlour biography 1963 English Diaries and Journals literary criticism 1943 Kate O Brien Self Portrait documentary for RTE television broadcast 28 March 1962 script by Kate O Brien Travel writing editFarewell Spain political travelogue 1937 Dublin and Cork photographic book with text by O Brien 1961 My Ireland travelogue 1962 Journalism editLong Distance column for The Irish Times newspaper 1967 71 book reviews see E Walshe s Ordinary People Dancing for Listings Critical studies on O Brien editJohn Jordan editor Special issue on Kate O Brien Stony Thursday Book vol 7 1981 Lorna Reynolds Kate O Brien A Literary Portrait 1987 John Logan editor With Warmest Love Lectures for Kate O Brien 1984 93 1994 Adele M Dalsimer Kate O Brien A Critical Study 1990 Eibhear Walshe editor Ordinary People Dancing Essays on Kate O Brien 1993 Eibhear Walshe Kate O Brien A Writing Life 2006 Mary Coll editor Faithful Companions Collected Essays Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the Kate O Brien Weekend 2009 Aintzane L Mentxaka Kate O Brien and the Fiction of Identity 2011 Michael G Cronin Impure Thoughts sexuality Catholicism and literature in twentieth century Ireland Manchester Manchester University Press 2012 Aintzane L Mentxaka The Postcolonial Traveller Kate O Brien and the Basques 2016 Jane Davison Kate O Brien and Spanish Literary Culture 2017 Paige Reynolds editor Special Issue on Kate O Brien Irish University Review Spring Summer 2018 Critical essays on O Brien editJoan Ryan Class and Creed in the Novels of Kate O Brien in M Harmon editor The Irish Writer and the City 1984 Lorna Reynolds The Image of Spain in the Novels of Kate O Brien in W Zack and H Kosok editors National Images and Stereotypes 1988 Emma Donoghue Out of Order Kate O Brien s Lesbian Fictions in Ordinary People Dancing Essays on Kate O Brien Eibhear Walshe ed Cork Cork University Press 1993 pp 36 59 Anne C Fogarty The Ear of the Other Dissident Voices in Kate O Brien s As Music and Splendor and Mary Dorcey s A Noise From the Woodshed in Eibhear Walshe editor Sex Nation and Dissent in Irish Writing 1997 Gerardine Meaney Territory and Transgression History Nationality and Sexuality in Kate O Brien s Fiction Irish Journal of Feminist Studies Col 2 issue 2 December 1997 77 92 Eamon Maher Love and the Loss of Faith in the Novels of Kate O Brien in Crosscurrents and Confluences 2000 Angela Ryan A Franco Irish Solution Francois Mauriac Kate O Brien and the Catholic Intellectual Novel in France and Ireland Anatomy of a Relationship Ed E Maher and G Neville Frankfurt Peter Lang 2004 97 109 Sharon Tighe Mooney Sexuality and Religion in Kate O Brien s Novels Essays in Irish Literary Criticism Gender Sexuality and Corporeality Deirdre Quinn and Sharon Tighe Mooney eds Lewiston New York Queenston and Lampeter Edwin Mellen Press 2008 pp 125 140 Aintzane L Mentxaka La Belle Kate O Brien and Female Beauty in Women Social and Cultural Change in Twentieth Century Ireland Dissenting Voices Sarah O Connor and Christopher C Shepard eds Newcastle Cambridge Scholars Press 2008 pp 183 198 Aintzane L Mentxaka A Catholic Agnostic Kate O Brien in Breaking the Mould Literary Representations of Irish Catholicism Eamon Maher and Eugene O Brien eds Peter Lang 2011 87 104 Aintzane L Mentxaka Politics and Feminism The Basque Contexts of Kate O Brien s Mary Lavelle in Irish University Review Vol 39 No 1 Spring Summer 2009 65 75 Emma Donoghue Embraces of Love in Faithful Companions Collected Essays Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of The Kate O Brien Weekend Mary Coll ed Limerick Mellick Press 2009 pp 16 31 Aintzane L Mentxaka Film Into Novel Kate O Brien s Modernist use of Film Techniques in Viewpoints Theoretical Perspectives on Irish Visual Texts Clare Bracken and Emma Radley eds Cork Cork University Press 2013 pp 124 36 Michael G Cronin Kate O Brien and the Erotics of Liberal Catholic Dissent Field Day Review 6 2010 Michael G Cronin Fantastic Longings The Moral Cartography of Kate O Brien s Mary Lavelle In Werner Huber Sandra Mayer and Julia Novak eds Irish Studies in Europe 4 Trier WVT Wissenschaftlicher Verlag 2012 Film adaptations editThat Lady 1955 starring Olivia de Havilland Gilbert Roland and Paul Scofield Last of Summer TV 1977 Talk of Angels 1998 starring Polly Walker Vincent Perez Franco Nero Frances McDormand Ruth McCabe and Penelope CruzSee also editLimerick Irish literature Censorship in the Republic of Ireland Feminist history in the United Kingdom List of people on stamps of IrelandFurther reading editIrish Writers on Writing featuring Kate O Brien Edited by Eavan Boland Trinity University Press 2007 Kate O Brien Online Archive for scholars and fans kate o brien online archiveReferences edit E Walshe Kate O Brien A Writing Life Cork UP 2006 a b A L Mentxaka Kate O Brien and the Fiction of Identity McFarland 2011 E Walshe Kate O Brien A Writing Life Cork UP 2006 What a shocker no more books to ban The Irish Times Retrieved 4 August 2021 St Teresa would back Madrid Review by H S Skeffington of Farewell to Spain Irish Democrat 16 October 1937 Retrieved 26 September 2015 E Donoghue Out of Order Kate O Brien s Lesbian Fictions in Ordinary People Dancing Essays on Kate O Brien Eibhear Walshe ed Cork Cork University Press 1993 pp 36 59 Eibhear Walshe Kate O Brien A Writing Life Dublin Irish Academic Press 2006 Fischerova Jana The Writer and the Censor Czechoslovakia and Ireland the case of Kate O Brien and Frank O Connor Unpublished paper CAIS conference Maynooth 24 June 2005 Limerick Literary Festival in honour of Kate O Brien Archived from the original on 27 September 2015 Retrieved 26 September 2015 Dugan page 170 Snoek Brown Jennifer A brief encounter with a librarian Reel Librarians 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kate O 27Brien novelist amp oldid 1205850411, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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