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About Siobhan
Siobhan
Dowd was born to Irish parents and brought up in London. She
spent much of her youth visiting the family cottage in Aglish, County Waterford
and later the family home in Wicklow Town.
Today she lives in Oxford with her librarian husband, but visits friends and relatives in
Ireland as often as she can.
She
attended a Catholic grammar school in south London and then gained a degree in
Classics at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University. After a short stint in publishing, she joined the writer's
organisation PEN, initially as a researcher for its Writers in
Prison Committee.
Photo - Siobhan at Killarney, 2006: G. Morgan
She
went on to be Program Director of PEN American Center's Freedom-to-Write
Committee in New York City. Her
work here included founding and leading the Rushdie Defense Committee USA and
travelling to Indonesia and Guatemala to investigate local human rights
conditions for writers. During her
seven-year spell in New York, Siobhan was named one of the "top 100
Irish-Americans" by Irish-America Magazine and AerLingus, for her global
anti-censorship work.
On
her return to the UK, Siobhan co-founded English PEN's readers and writers programme, which
takes authors into schools in socially deprived areas, as well as
prisons, young offender's institutions and community projects.
During
2004, Siobhan served as Deputy Commissioner for Children's Rights in Oxfordshire,
working with local government to ensure that statutory services affecting
children's lives conform with UN protocols.
Siobhan has an MA with Distinction in Gender and Ethnic Studies at Greenwich University, has authored short stories, columns and articles, and edited two anthologies.
A Swift Pure Cry, Siobhan's first novel, was published by David Fickling Books, an imprint of Random House Children's Books, in March 2006. In May 2007, it won the Eilis Dillon award in Ireland for a first-time children's author. It was also long-listed for the Guardian Children's Book Prize and short-listed for the Booktrust Teenage Fiction Prize and the Waterstones Children's Book Prize. It is currently short-listed for the 2007 Carnegie Award, the Brandford Boase Award and the Sheffield Children's Book Awards. It has also been short-listed for the Jungenliteraturpreis in Germany, where it was published in 2006. The American edition appeared on April 10th, 2007. and the French edition on April 13th, 2007.
Her second novel, The London Eye
Mystery (a story for 9- to 12-year-olds), was published by David Fickling Books
on 7 June
2007 and her third novel, Bog Child (a story for teenagers),
will appear in February 2008.
In May 2007, Siobhan was named one of "25 authors of the future" by Waterstones Books as part of the latter's 25th anniversary celebrations.
Siobhan died on 21st August 2007 aged 47. She had been receiving treatment for advanced breast cancer for 3 years and, did not go gentle into that good night.
Links to obituaries:
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Last updated August 2007 (c) Siobhan Dowd and Geoff Morgan 2007