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Jennifer Johnston

 
Irish Literature Companion: Jennifer [Prudence] Johnston

Johnston, Jennifer [Prudence] (1930- ), novelist. Born in Dublin, the daughter of Denis Johnston and the actress and director Shelagh Richards (1903-1985), she was educated at TCD. Married with four children, then divorced and remarried, she settled near Derry in the 1970s. Johnston began as a novelist with The Captains and the Kings (1972) and The Gates (1973—although written first), dealing with the isolation of ascendancy families in 20th-cent. Ireland. How Many Miles to Babylon? (1974) examines a friendship between an Anglo-Irish officer and a soldier, both serving in the trenches of the First World War. Shadows on Our Skin (1977) explores an ultimately tragic relationship between a Catholic schoolboy and his Protestant teacher in modern Derry. She returned to the ascendancy setting with The Old Jest (1979), an account of a quest for personal integrity in the face of divided sympathies. The Christmas Tree (1981) is the story of Constance Keating, who meets her end on her own terms. Both The Railway Station Man (1984) and Fool's Sanctuary (1987) play variations on the theme of private worlds of love destroyed by violence. The Invisible Worm (1991) is a story of hidden intimacy. Two Moons (1998) was a further novel.

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Jennifer Johnston (born 12 January 1930 in Dublin) is an Irish novelist, winner of the Whitbread Book Award for The Old Jest in 1979, and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1977. The Old Jest, a novel about the Irish War of Independence was later made into a film called The Dawning, starring Anthony Hopkins, produced by Sarah Lawson and directed by Robert Knights.

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Personal life

She was born in Dublin, Ireland, to the Irish actor/director Shelah Richards and the playwright Denis Johnston, a cousin of the late actress Geraldine Fitzgerald, via Fitzgerald's mother, Edith. She was educated at Trinity College Dublin, and currently lives in Derry, Northern Ireland. She was born into the Church of Ireland and many of her novels deal with the fading of the Protestant Anglo-Irish ascendancy in the 20th century.

She is a member of Aosdána.

Bibliography

Novels

Plays

  • The Nightingale and Not the Lark (1981)
  • Indian Summer (1983)
  • Andante un Poco Mosso, in The Best Short Plays 1983, (1983)
  • The Porch (1986)
  • The Desert Lullaby: A Play in Two Acts (1996)

External links


 
 

 

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Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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