Pearson Graduate wins prestigious Man Booker Prize

Anne Enright 1980 (PC5)
Name: 
Anne Enright
Graduation Year: 
1980 (PC5)
Ireland

Anne Enright, of Ireland was named the winner of the Man Booker Prize for Fiction for her novel The Gathering. More recently she wrote Yesterdays Weather, (also published as Taking Pictures) which was dedicated to Pearson College teachers Theo and Eileen Dombrowski.

Ms. Enright has published a collection of stories, The Portable Virgin, which won the Rooney Prize, three previous novels, The Wig My Father Wore, What Are You Like? (short listed for the Whitbread Novel Award) and The Pleasure of Eliza Lynch and a series of essays Making Babies: Stumbling into Motherhood.

Ms. Enright joins compatriots Iris Murdoch, Roddy Doyle and John Banville who won the prize in 1978, 1993 and 2005 respectively. In a recent interview, Ms Enright said, “I am a passionate writer, I think – maybe there is no other kind – by which I mean I bring all of myself to a book, and am unstinting: I find it hard to compromise the voices in my head.”

Anne Enright was born in Dublin where she continues to live and work. After graduating from Pearson College she studied English and Philosophy at Trinity College in Dublin and then received her MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia.