Philip Ó Ceallaigh is a brilliant,
uncompromising and ambitious
writer who has long been
resident in Bucharest. Of his
collection of stories ‘Trouble’,
the Los Angeles Review of
Books wrote: ‘Ó Ceallaigh writes
with such immediacy, such
confessional intensity, that when
the narrator leans in close and
says, “Look — there lies trouble,”
it is impossible to look away (Colm Tóibín)
Philip Ó Ceallaigh has published over fifty
short stories, most of them gathered
in his three collections. The most
recent is Trouble, from the Stinging Fly
Press. He has been described by John
Banville as “a master” of the short story
form and named by Rob Doyle as his
“favourite living writer of short stories”.
His work has appeared in Granta, The
Los Angeles Review of Books and The
Irish Times and has been translated
into over a dozen languages. He was
awarded the Rooney Prize for Irish
Literature for his first book, Notes from
a Turkish Whorehouse. He is also an
essayist and critic with a particular
interest in Jewish-European history,
and his translation of Mihail Sebastian’s
interwar novel For Two Thousand Years
was published by Penguin Classics.
He lives in Bucharest, Romania.