Lynn Buckle | |
---|---|
Nationality | Irish |
Alma mater | University of Warwick Camberwell College of Art Maynooth University |
Occupation | Novelist |
Lynn Buckle is an Irish writer. She is deaf, and her second novel, What Willow Says, won the Barbellion Prize for writers living with chronic illness or disability. [1] She is the founder of the Irish Climate Writing Group.
In February 2022 she was interviewed on BBC Radio 4's Front Row. [2]
Buckle was born in Bristol, England, and studied at the University of Warwick, Camberwell School of Art and NUI Maynooth. [3] She moved to Ireland in around 1990. [4]
Buckle's first published novel was The Groundsmen in 2018. [5] After writing it she offered it to several publishers before it was accepted by époque press, which she describes as "a fairly new UK indie company based in Cheltenham". [4]
Her second novel, What Willow Says, also published by époque, [6] won the 2022 Barbellion Prize for writers who live with chronic illness or a disability. It has been described as "a meditation on nature and deafness." [2]
She lost her hearing gradually [7] and now hears "my versions of sounds, delivered through my technology". [7]
In 2021 she was one of five writers to be virtual writers-in-residence in Norwich, England, during the COVID-19 pandemic, under the banner "Imagining the City". [8] During the project she wrote a short story "Ailbhe’s Tale" which "draws inspiration from Norwich and Dublin's shared shared histories of hidden waterways through the lens of gender, power, and place." [9] and was later published as part of Arachne Press's anthology What Meets the Eye? The Deaf Perspective. [3]
Buckle is increasingly addressing the topic of climate and is the founder of the Irish Writers Climate Group at the Irish Writer's Centre. [7]
has spent the last thirty years in Ireland
Lynn Buckle | |
---|---|
Nationality | Irish |
Alma mater | University of Warwick Camberwell College of Art Maynooth University |
Occupation | Novelist |
Lynn Buckle is an Irish writer. She is deaf, and her second novel, What Willow Says, won the Barbellion Prize for writers living with chronic illness or disability. [1] She is the founder of the Irish Climate Writing Group.
In February 2022 she was interviewed on BBC Radio 4's Front Row. [2]
Buckle was born in Bristol, England, and studied at the University of Warwick, Camberwell School of Art and NUI Maynooth. [3] She moved to Ireland in around 1990. [4]
Buckle's first published novel was The Groundsmen in 2018. [5] After writing it she offered it to several publishers before it was accepted by époque press, which she describes as "a fairly new UK indie company based in Cheltenham". [4]
Her second novel, What Willow Says, also published by époque, [6] won the 2022 Barbellion Prize for writers who live with chronic illness or a disability. It has been described as "a meditation on nature and deafness." [2]
She lost her hearing gradually [7] and now hears "my versions of sounds, delivered through my technology". [7]
In 2021 she was one of five writers to be virtual writers-in-residence in Norwich, England, during the COVID-19 pandemic, under the banner "Imagining the City". [8] During the project she wrote a short story "Ailbhe’s Tale" which "draws inspiration from Norwich and Dublin's shared shared histories of hidden waterways through the lens of gender, power, and place." [9] and was later published as part of Arachne Press's anthology What Meets the Eye? The Deaf Perspective. [3]
Buckle is increasingly addressing the topic of climate and is the founder of the Irish Writers Climate Group at the Irish Writer's Centre. [7]
has spent the last thirty years in Ireland