Ciaran O'Driscoll (born 1943) is an Irish poet and novelist born inCallan, County Kilkenny and living inLimerick.
Ciaran O’Driscoll lives in Limerick. He worked as a lecturer for theSchool of Art and Design at theLimerick Institute of Technology before he retired. A member ofAosdána, he has published nine books of poetry, including Gog and Magog (1987), Moving On, Still There (2001), and Surreal Man (2006). His fourth collection, The Old Women of Magione, was translated into Italian in 2006, and a Selected Poems in Slovene translation was published in 2013. A poetry collection, Angel Hour (2021), is his most recent publication. Liverpool University Press published his childhood memoir, A Runner Among Falling Leaves (2001). His novel, A Year's Midnight, was published by Pighog Press (2012). His novella The Golden Ass (Limerick Writers' Centre Publishing, Limerick, 2024)
His work has been featured in special Irish issues of European literary journals and anthologized on several occasions.
Eamon Grennan, writing inThe Irish Times, called him "a poet in confident possession and exercise of his craft. [His] poems do what good poems should do, widening and deepening the world for the rest of us."[1]
According to the critic Michael S. Begnal, reviewing O'Driscoll'sThe Speaking Trees, "his poems often conjure dream-like or visionary states... His language is clear and deliberate but describes a bizarre or surreal subject matter."[2]
O'Driscoll's poems have been translated into many languages, including French, German, Irish, Italian, Hungarian, Russian, Scots Gaelic, Serbo-Croat, Slovenian, and Spanish. His awards for poetry include a Bursary in Literature from theIrish Arts Council (1983), the James Joyce Literary Millennium Prize (1989), and the Patrick and Katherine Kavanagh Fellowship in Poetry (2000). His poem ‘Please Hold’ (featured in Forward's anthology Poems of the Decade) has become a set text for A-Level English Literature.