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Paul Kearney

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Paul Kearney


Born
in County Antrim, Ireland
January 01, 1967

Genre

Influences
Tolkien, CS Lewis, Patrick O Brian. Rosemary Sutcliff, Mary Renault


Paul Kearney was born in rural County Antrim, Ireland, in 1967. His father was a butcher, and his mother was a nurse. He rode horses, had lots of cousins, and cut turf and baled hay. He often smelled of cowshit.

He grew up through the worst of the 'Troubles' in Northern Ireland, a time when bombs and gunfire were part of every healthy young boy's adolescence. He developed an unhealthy interest in firearms and Blowing Things Up - but what growing boy hasn't?

By some fluke of fate he managed to get to Oxford University, and studied Old Norse, Anglo-Saxon and Middle English.

He began writing books because he had no other choice. His first, written at aged sixteen, was a magnificent epic, influenced heavily by James Joyce, Samuel Beckett, Robert
...more

Paul Kearney isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.

Been a long time

I've done quite a few jobs in this world, many of them menial, physically demanding and borderline exploitative- some downright dangerous. (I was a soldier once, a long time ago). To this day, writing is for me the most challenging task, or vocation, or job I've undertaken, to the point where I gave it up for periods and just slaved away (relatively) happily on a minimum wage, allowing my mind to Read more of this blog post »
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Published on August 18, 2020 13:04
Average rating: 3.87 · 17,874 ratings · 1,285 reviews · 57 distinct worksSimilar authors
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Quotes by Paul Kearney  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“I have found that there are two ways of dealing with men. Either you treat them with respect, or you kill them. Anything in between merely breeds resentment and the desire for revenge.”
PAUL KEARNEY

“Places ain't home. People is. Bricks and chairs is nothing.”
Paul Kearney, The Wolf in the Attic
tags: home

“It must be terrible to be old, when you love someone who died young. They never change in your mind, and every day you see yourself grow away from that person you were when you loved and knew them. Until you are more of a shadow than they are, and the girl you were is altogether gone, more dead even than that young man on the battlefield.”
Paul Kearney, The Wolf in the Attic

Topics Mentioning This Author

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100+ Books in 2024: Siobhan's 100+ list for 2010 28 85 Dec 30, 2010 10:25PM  
Irish Readers: Keith 7 22 May 23, 2011 10:55PM  
Fantasy Book Club: This topic has been closed to new comments. September Nominations 55 456 Jul 17, 2012 06:30PM  
A Song of Ice & F...: What do you read while waiting? 75 1098 Oct 27, 2012 03:19PM  
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