Seán Hewitt has been awarded the 2022 Rooney Prize for Irish Literature at a ceremony in Trinity College Dublin this evening. The €10,000 prize, awarded annually since 1976 and administered by the Trinity Oscar Wilde Centre for Creative Writing, celebrates an outstanding body of work by an emerging Irish writer under 40 years of age.
“In poetry and prose, Seán Hewitt’s work is visionary and gemlike,” said prize jury member Dr Rita Sakr of Maynooth University: “His language is graceful and dazzling as it communicates distinct yet also multifaceted forms of longing, grief and liberating self-reflection, most powerfully captured in figurations of the vulnerability that humans and the natural environment experience together and alone.
“All of us on the judging panel were struck by the ways in which his writings give a precise, intimate sense of place, emotion and atmosphere while conjuring unbounded ways of sensing beauty and re-imagining community amidst the isolating darkness. We were highly impressed by this expansive creative gift that we know will keep on giving to Irish literature.”
Hewitt said: “I’m so delighted to be the 2022 recipient of the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Publishing any book is always an exposing and quite terrifying thing, so this has arrived like a supreme reassurance. To be given such a prestigious award for a body of work is galvanising, and I’m very grateful to the judging committee for their close and kind attention, and to Peter Rooney and the Rooney family for their generosity. To look at the previous winners of the award and to see my name amongst theirs is a true honour.”
Dee Devlin is not Conor McGregor’s moral keeper. That’s his responsibility alone
Newstalk’s interview with Gerry Hutch is an anticlimax after Kevin Myers’s inflammatory opinions fill the air
Designer Helen James: ‘Begrudgery is knitted into the fabric of our being’
Jet stream that affects Ireland’s weather is seeing increased ‘wobbles’. Here’s what that may mean
The poet and author published his debut collection of poetry, Tongues of Fire (Jonathan Cape), in 2020. It won The Laurel Prize in 2021 and was shortlisted for The Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award, the John Pollard Foundation International Poetry Prize and the Dalkey Emerging Writer Award.
His memoir, All Down Darkness Wide, was published earlier this year by Jonathan Cape and in the US by Penguin Press. Hewitt is Teaching Fellow in Twentieth-Century British & Irish Literature in Trinity’s School of English and a poetry critic for The Irish Times.
Discussing his work, Hewitt said: “Tongues of Fire arose out of a dual interest in the body and sexuality and in what we often hear called ‘the nature poem’, but I think it blends the two, and deals with symbolic landscapes and real ones simultaneously. As I was completing work on it, my father died, and so it took on a tone of elegy towards the end, as I began to be confronted with how the body blends back into nature. One of the centrepieces of the collection is a retelling of the Irish legend Buile Suibhne (I studied Old Irish for a while at university). The book won The Laurel Prize in 2021, and that was a massive honour for me.
“I think of All Down Darkness Wide, my latest book, as a sort of gothic memoir: it follows, in a non-linear way, the story of my coming of age, moving across England, South America and Sweden, but it also has a cast of ghosts, and dips back in time to Victorian Dublin, where the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins lived, and to interwar Sweden. The ghosts, which are figures from queer history, guide the story and haunt it.”
Hewitt was born in Warrington, Cheshire to an Irish mother and an English father. “My mother, Deirdre, was born in Limerick, and when she was a child the O’Callaghan family moved to Warrington, in the north west of England, in search of work, so I grew up in the diaspora, with Ireland as a constant presence, though I didn’t move to Dublin until late 2017. My father was English - a Warrington man - so I owe my life to migration. It often seems to confuse people when I won’t choose a side, as though Englishness and Irishness are always opposing, but I live in the hyphen - Irish-English, English-Irish - and am quite happy there.”
Benefactor of the prize, Dr Peter Rooney, congratulated the winner: “It is a great thrill to have Seán Hewitt as our 2022 Rooney Prize winner, especially as it marks the first time we have awarded the prize for a memoir. Seán’s writing is a poetic prose, captivating the reader and bringing them on a journey through his life often during difficult times. These hardships, though, are always matched with beautiful depictions of scenery and emotion. We are honoured to have Seán join our illustrious list of Rooney Prize winners.”
Commenting on the Rooney Prize and its relationship with the Oscar Wilde Centre, Deirdre Madden, co-director of the MPhil in Creative Writing, said: “We are delighted that the Rooney Prize has its base in the Oscar Wilde Centre for Irish Writing. It is wholly fitting, given our task of nurturing and helping to develop new writers through our MPhil programme and our PhD in Literary Practice, both of which find their home in the centre. We are proud of our MPhil alumni Sara Baume and Claire Kilroy who are past winners of the prize.
“I myself was honoured with the award many years ago and know how important and validating it is for a writer to win such a prize at the early stage of their writing life. I also cherish memories of Dan and Pat Rooney who did so much for both writing in Ireland and for Irish American relations, especially in the north: wonderful and exceptional people, who are much missed. May they rest in peace. We in the Oscar Wilde Centre congratulate this year’s winner and look forward to many more years of connection with the Rooney Prize.”
The Rooney Prize is the longest-established literary prize in Ireland. Previous winners include Kate Cruise O’Brien (1979), Neil Jordan (1981), Frank McGuinness (1985), Anne Enright (1991), Mike McCormack (1996), Claire Keegan (2000), Kevin Barry (2007), Lucy Caldwell (2011) and Doireann Ní Ghríofa (2016).