Frank O'Connor
(Michael Francis O'Donova, Cork, 1903-Dublin, 1966) Irish writer.Coming from a poor family, he was a bookseller in Dublin and from 1936 to 1939 director of the Abbey Theater.
His nationalist militancy led him to join the Irish Republican Army during the Civil War and he reflected his historical disappointments in the volume of short stories Guests of the Nation (1931).One of his best-known stories is My Oedipus Complex , in which he satirically used his own formative experiences and the Irish family tradition around the mother as the axis.
His stories, the most recognized of his narrative, start from a realistic observation of the Irish characters and their family life. Guests of the Nation were followed by Apples of Discord (1936), Crab Apple Jelly (1944) and The Stories of Frank O'Connor (1953).Less resonance had his novels The Saint and Mary Kate (1932) and Dutch Interior , of 1940.
He also wrote plays ( Mose's Rock , 1938), the translation of an anthology of Irish poems ( Book of Ireland , 1959) and a compilation of his own poems ( Kings, Lords and Commons , 1960).Mention should also be made of the two-volume autobiography entitled An Only Child (1961) and My Father's Son , the latter published posthumously in 1968.
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