Efacis

  • About Us
    • Welcome by the EFACIS president
    • About Us
    • Efacis Board
  • Conferences
    • PhD Seminars
    • Past EFACIS Conferences
      • Conferences
      • PHD Seminars
    • Werner Huber Grants
  • Publications
    • Review of Irish Studies in Europe
      • Call for Submissions
    • Irish Studies in Europe
      • ISE Series Titles
    • Literature as Translation
      • Anne Enright
      • John Banville
      • Yeats Reborn
    • Kaleidoscope
      • Kaleidoscope 1: Irish fiction authors about writing
      • Kaleidoscope 2: Europe in Ireland
      • Kaleidoscope 3
    • EFACIS Newsletter
    • Journals
    • PUBLICATION ETHICS POLICY
  • Projects
    • EFACIS Book Club
    • EFACIS Roundtable Discussions
    • Previous projects
      • Aistriú
      • German Irish Studies Itinerary
  • Irish Itinerary
    • About the Irish Itinerary
    • Upcoming events
    • Testimonials
    • The Irish Itinerary Podcast
    • Artists
  • Members
    • How to become a member
    • The Benefits of Becoming an EFACIS Member
    • Centres of Irish Studies
    • Affiliated Organisations
    • log in

Patterson, Glenn

  1. Home
  2. Patterson, Glenn

Glenn Patterson was born in Belfast in 1961 and studied on the Creative Writing MA at the University of East Anglia taught by Malcolm Bradbury. He returned to Northern Ireland in 1988 and was Writer in the Community for Lisburn and Craigavon under a scheme administered by the Arts Council of Northern Ireland.

He is the author of several novels. The first, Burning Your Own (1988), set in Northern Ireland in 1969, won a Betty Trask Award and the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Fat Lad (1992), was shortlisted for the Guinness Peat Aviation Book Award and explores the effects of the political situation in Northern Ireland through the story of a young man returning to his homeland after an absence of ten years. Black Night at Big Thunder Mountain (1995) narrates the experiences of three people brought together on the Euro Disney construction site. The International (1999), is set in a Belfast hotel in 1967, and tells the story of a day in the life of Danny, an 18-year-old barman. Number 5 (2003), traces the lives of the various occupants of a Belfast house over a 45-year period. That Which Was (2004), is also set in Belfast and explores the interaction between memory, history and society. Lapsed Protestant, a collection of his non-fiction, was published in 2006.  His more recent work includes The Third Party (2007), The Mill For Grinding Old People Young (2012), Gull (2016) and Where are we now? (2020). Glenn is currently a Professor of Creative Writing in the School of Arts, English and Literature at Queen's University Belfast.

Photo credit: John Harrison

Efacis

Theme - ©2018 - All rights reserved EFACIS