John B. Keane

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John B. Keane
Born John Brendan Keane
(1928-07-21)July 21, 1928
Church Street Listowel, County Kerry, Ireland
Died May 30, 2002(2002-05-30) (aged 73)
Listowel, County Kerry, Ireland
Nationality Irish
Education St. Michael's College Listowel
Spouse Mary O'Connor
Child(ren) Billy Keane
Conor Keane
John Keane
Joanna Keane
Information
Notable work(s) The Field, Sive
Awards Honorary Life Member of the Royal Dublin Society

John Brendan Keane (21 July 1928 30 May 2002) was an Irish playwright, novelist and essayist from Listowel, County Kerry.

Biography

A son of a national school teacher, William B. Keane and Hannah Purtill, John B Keane was educated at Listowel National School and then at St. Michael's College Listowel. He worked as a chemist's assistant for A.H. Jones, a chemist who dabbled in buying antiques. Keane had various jobs in the UK between 1951 and 1955, and was a pub owner in Listowel from 1955.

He married Mary O'Connor in 1955 and had four children: Billy, Conor, John and Joanna. He was an Honorary Life Member of the Royal Dublin Society from 1991, served as president of Irish PEN and was a founder member of the Society of Irish Playwrights as well as a member of Aosdána. He remained a prominent member of the Fine Gael party throughout his life, never being shy of political debate.

His nephew is the award-winning investigative journalist Fergal Keane. His son John is a journalist with the Kilkenny People.

Awards and honours

List of works

  • Many Young Men of Twenty (1946)
  • Sive (1959)
  • Sharon's Grave (1960)
  • The Highest House on the Mountain (1961)
  • The Man From Clare (1962)
  • The Year of the Hiker (1963)
  • The Field (1956)
  • Hut 42 (1968)
  • The Rain at the End of the Summer (1968)
  • Big Maggie (1969)
  • The One-Way Ticket (1972)
  • Values (1973)
  • The Change in Mame Fadden (1973)
  • Letters of a Matchmaker (1975)
  • The Buds of Ballybunion (1979)
  • The Chastitute (1981)
  • The Bodhran Makers (1986)
  • The Contractors (1988)
  • Moll (1991)
  • Durango: A Novel (1992)
  • Faoiseamh
  • Pishogue
  • The Crazy Wall
  • No More in Dust

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.