Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (2024)

Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (1)Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (2)Getty Images

Edna O'Brien was the woman who scandalised Catholic Ireland.

Her book The Country Girls was banned, burned and denounced from the pulpit in her native country.

But she went on to carve a literary career and win a reputation as a controversial, ground-breaking and gifted author.

No less a literary figure as Philip Roth once described her as "the most gifted woman now writing in English".

She was also a woman of ageless spirit who lived a colourful life to the full. In the London of the 1960s and 1970s, she had what she called a Mata Hari reputation.

Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (3)Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (4)Getty Images

She threw glittering parties and rubbed shoulders with stars like Marlon Brando, Elizabeth Taylor and Robert Mitchum.

But in her later life, she shrugged off the Mata Hari label as "more garbage". She insisted it was her inner life that mattered most.

Edna O'Brien was born in December 1930 at Tuamgraney, County Clare. It was a place she later described as "fervid" and "enclosed".

She was the youngest of four children and she grew up in rural Ireland in a strictly religious, farming family.

Lonely child

She once said that her mother, Lena - a controlling woman - did not want her to be a writer.

When asked what O'Brien was like as a child, Lena replied: "She was a very lonely child and hard to reach."

In recent years, O'Brien said that most writers were lonely: "You would not go through the purgatorial of writing unless you were a lonely person."

She was educated by the Sisters of Mercy, an order whose strict and often abusive style would be castigated in later years by an Irish government inquiry.

O'Brien's first novel, The Country Girls, was published in 1960, the story of two convent school girls, Cathleen and Baba, who get expelled for writing a dirty note.

It laid bare an Ireland where young girls could be spirited, sexual beings.

O'Brien said the book was dedicated to her mother but that she did not read it.

"She thought it was courting sin... but she kind of forgave me as she got older," she said.

"There was a lot of commotion. There were loads of people who wanted to lynch me... they thought they were in the book."

The Country Girls was the first in a trilogy - followed by The Lonely Girl (later published as The Girl with Green Eyes) and Girls in their Married Bliss, tracing the two characters as they grow up, rebel and run away to Dublin and London.

O'Brien herself "ran away" when in 1954, against her parents' wishes, she eloped and married the Czech-Irish writer Ernest Gebler. The couple left Ireland for London.

Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (5)Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (6)PA

They had two sons, Carlo and Sasha, but the marriage failed after 10 years and she fought and won custody of her children.

Looking back on that period, O'Brien said that when she gave her husband The Country Girls he said: "You can write and I will never forgive you."

"It took the ground from under his feet and his own confidence," she said.

The novel created a scandal and was a critical and popular hit.

There was plenty of mud-slinging - although O'Brien was no stranger to insults.

John Broderick, in the literary periodical Hibernia, "quoting my husband's exact words … said that my 'talent resided in my knickers'."

Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (7)Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (8)Getty Images

But she went on to carve a long literary career of more than 50 years, writing novels and short stories, winning plaudits and prizes.

She was a regular presence on TV and radio. In 1979, she took part in the first edition of Question Time - alongside the MPs Teddy Taylor and Michael Foot. She was the last surviving member of that panel.

Several of her books have been adapted for stage and screen. The Country Girls took three weeks to write, but her memoir, The Country Girl, published in 2012, took as many years.

Ireland's shame

O'Brien had a long and fraught relationship with Ireland. Among the topics she chose to write about were the Troubles, the IRA and abortion.

"Ours indeed was a land of shame," she wrote, "a land of murder, and a land of strange, throttled, sacrificial women".

Her novel Down by the River dealt with the true story of the X case in Ireland when a court ruled that a teenager who had been raped could not travel to the United Kingdom for an abortion.

She was heavily criticised for her treatment of this case and many did not like the lyricism of her writing.

'I'm nobody's groupie'

She was also lambasted for a profile of Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams that she wrote for the New York Times in 1994.

"I was asked, 'Am I a groupie?' I'm nobody's groupie," she said.

Edward Pearce, writing in the Guardian in the same year, called her "the Barbara Cartland of long-distance republicanism".

She continued to write well into her old age, saying that she would die if she could not do so. In 2018, O'Brien was made an honorary Dame of the British Empire.

She will be remembered as a woman who changed the nature of Irish fiction.

In the words of her fellow novellist, Andrew O'Hagan, "she brought the woman's experience, and sex and internal lives of those people on to the page, and she did it with style, and she made those concerns international".

As a long-term exile from her native land, she had, nevertheless, Ireland to thank for her imagination and her gift.

It was one born of a childhood in the beauty and isolation of her mother country.

Without it, she said, "I wouldn't have got the raw stuff. And the raw stuff is very good for the real stuff."

Literature

Obituary: Edna O'Brien, the controversial Irish novelist (2024)

FAQs

Who did Edna O'Brien marry? ›

In 1954, O'Brien met and married, against her parents' wishes, the Irish writer Ernest Gébler, and the couple moved to London in 1959, where, as she later put it, "We lived in SW 20. Sub-urb-ia". They had two sons, Sasha, an architect who lives in London, and writer Carlo Gébler, but the marriage ended in 1964.

What age is Edna O'Brien? ›

Acclaimed Irish writer Edna O'Brien has died at the age of 93. Ms O'Brien died yesterday in London after a long illness. She was a leading light for a generation of Irish writers, and her loss will have a profound impact on the Irish literary scene.

Who is the controversial Irish writer? ›

Irish writer Edna O'Brien died Saturday at the age of 93 after a long illness. O'Brien sparked controversy in Ireland for the way she wrote about women's lives and relationships, as NPR's Isabella Gomez Sarmiento reports.

What awards did Edna O Brien win? ›

Her honors did include an Irish Book Award for lifetime achievement, the PEN/Nabokov prize and the Frank O'Connor award in 2011 for her story collection “Saints and Sinners,” for which she was praised by poet and award judge Thomas McCarthy as “the one who kept speaking when everyone else stopped talking about being an ...

Does Edna have a husband? ›

Léonce Pontellier, a forty-year-old, wealthy New Orleans businessman, is Edna's husband. Although he has great affection for Edna and his sons, he spends little time with them because he is often away on business or with his friends.

Why did Edna marry her husband? ›

Chapter 7 reveals much about Edna's history of rebellion: running away into the fields to escape her father's gloomy prayer services and marrying Léonce not out of personal passion for him but because of her family's "violent opposition" to her marrying a Catholic man.

Which Irish author had cerebral palsy? ›

Christy Brown (5 June 1932 – 7 September 1981) was an Irish writer and painter whose cerebral palsy allowed him to write or type only with the toes of one foot. His most recognized work is his autobiography, titled My Left Foot (1954).

Where did Edna O'Brien live? ›

What is the first name of the Irish novelist O'Brien? ›

The Irish writer Edna O'Brien, who explored the complications and contradictions of women's lives in a literary career lasting more than half a century, has died aged 93 after a long illness, her agent has announced.

What is the O Brien Awards? ›

The purpose of the Davey O'Brien Foundation is to recognize outstanding. student-athletes for their achievements both on and off the field through the. foundation's various awards programs, led by the annual National Quarterback Award.

Who did Edmond obrien marry? ›

Personal life. O'Brien was first married to actress Nancy Kelly from 1941 until 1942. He married his second wife, actress Olga San Juan in 1948. San Juan was the mother of his three children, television producer Bridget O'Brien and actors Maria O'Brien and Brendan O'Brien.

Who did Margaret O Brien marry? ›

Personal life. O'Brien was married to Harold Allen Jr. from August 9, 1959 until their divorce in 1968. She was married to steel-industry executive Roy Thorvald Thorsen (13 Nov 1930-4 Jun 2018) from June 6, 1974 until his death.

Who did Soledad O Brien marry? ›

Personal life. In 1995, O'Brien married Bradford "Brad" Raymond, co-head of investment banking at Stifel. They have four children: two daughters, Sofia (October 2000) and Cecilia (March 2002), and twin sons Charles and Jackson (August 2004). On the NPR quiz show Wait Wait...

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