from The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
After graduating in 2004, Ms. Lally worked as an English teacher in
Japan for a year and then traveled a lot. Back in Ireland, she held
various jobs, including as a copywriter, and she went to New York for a
time as a home helper. She found herself unemployed in 2011, which was
when she got the idea for Eggshells.
“Eggshells is about a socially isolated misfit who walks around
Dublin searching for patterns and meaning in graffiti or
magical-sounding place names or small doors that could lead to another
world,” Ms. Lally wrote to the Post.
“I spent the guts of a year wandering around Dublin in 2011, the year
I was unemployed. I had been laid off from my job in the recession and
was walking the streets myself looking for ‘staff wanted’ signs, and
came up with the idea of my character, Vivian, who’s just looking to
belong, to connect with someone,” she said.
Ms. Lally finally got a job in data entry and decided to develop
Vivian’s character and write her book. Once she finished it, she entered
it in a competition and won, with her prize being a day pitching her
novel to agents and publishers. She got an agent and a book deal.
“There were many, many rejections, but after hundreds of job rejections, I think I’d gotten used to being told ‘no,’” she said.
Her book was published in 2015, the same year she found herself out of a job again. She had remained friends with some of her old cleaning buddies from Trinity, and they told her the school was hiring housekeepers. “I went back,” she said.
Alex Kudera’s award-winning novel, Fight for Your Long Day (Atticus Books), was drafted in a walk-in closet during a summer in Seoul, South Korea. Auggie’s Revenge (Beating Windward Press) is his second novel. His numerous short stories include “Frade Killed Ellen” (Dutch Kills Press), “Bombing from Above” (Heavy Feather Review), and “A Thanksgiving” (Eclectica Magazine).
Showing posts with label Rooney Prize. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rooney Prize. Show all posts
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Auggie's Revenge and Fight for Your Long Day
affordable copies
Why pay less when spending more is so easy and free? Right. In other words, if anyone would like a shipped paperback copy of Auggie...
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In theory, a book isn't alive unless it's snuggled comfortably in the reading bin in the bathroom at Oprah's or any sitting Pres...
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I enjoyed reading Patrick Wensink's article in Men's Health on Christmas tree salesmen , and it also reminded me of the short, spar...
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Reading Little White Duck: A Childhood in China led me to Wuhan, China, a large sprawling city dissected by a huge river that Chairman Mao ...
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And, finally, near the end of Journey , Celine arrives at his Slovak beauty, a far cry from the meth-infested psychotic " no-neck Slova...
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Here's another article about American companies recruiting overseas to find capable workers--in this case, in manufacturing jobs. Toget...
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I'm happy to announce that I'll be reading from " Frade Killed Ellen " or Auggie's Revenge at 3 p.m. as part of an ...
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It's always a bit disappointing to see these somewhat simplistic articles get a shiny new website when my more developed and nuanced n...
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Like a well trained dog, I exceed my reading limit early each month, but I'm still able to pass on that the New York Times has Occupy W...
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General Electric (CNBC) takes time out from lighting the world to swoop in late and sell advertising off the student-loan bubble . When I wa...
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An excerpt from and a book review of Auggie's Revenge appears in the June 2017 issue of the European academic journal American, Briti...