Kevin Doyle has had numerous stories published. In 1997 he won an Ian St James Award for his story ‘Do You Like Oranges?’ He is currently working on his first novel, about an accident at a chemical plant.
Kevin Graham
Kevin Graham’s poems have appeared most recently in Poetry Ireland Review and in Causeway. Smithereens Press published a chapbook, Traces, in 2016.
Kevin Higgins
Kevin Higgins’ poetry recently appeared in Short Fuse: The Global Anthology of New Fusion Poetry (Rattapallax Press, New York) and in Breaking The Skin: New Irish Poetry (Black Mountain Press). His website is www.kevinhiggins.net.
Kevin Power
Kevin Power is the author of two novels, Bad Day in Blackrock (2008) and White City (2021), as well as a book of criticism, The Written World (2022). He is the winner of the 2009 Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. His writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The Guardian, Irish Times, and many other places. He teaches in the School of English, Trinity College Dublin.
Kieron Corrigan
Kieron Corrigan was born in 1960, a child of the Irish diaspora. He lives in the West of England, and works in NHS mental health services.
Killian O’Donnell
Killian O’Donnell lives in Dublin when not in Galway. He has published poetry in New Irish Writing, Poetry Ireland Review, The Honest Ulsterman and The Dublin Magazine among others.
Justin Barrett
Justin Barrett lives in Salt Lake City, Utah. He works as a chemist for a niche pharmaceutical company by day while by night he tries to discern the greater alchemy of our lives. More work is needed. His latest book, 25 Best-Loved Poems of the Future, was released last year (Bottle of Smoke Press).
K.G. Martin
K.G. Martin attended a course in creative writing at the Irish Writers’ Centre in 1997 and has been writing ever since. Her stories have been published in The Sunday Tribune and online with Electric Acorn and www.the-literati.com. Shortlisted for the 2001 Hennessy New Irish Writer Award and the George A. Birmingham Award, she is working on a novel.
K. S. Moore
K. S. Moore’s poetry has recently appeared in The Ogham Stone and Crannóg. Poems have also featured in Ink Sweat and Tears, And Other Poems and Nutshells and Nuggets. Flash fiction and short stories have been published in FlashFlood, Metazen, Number Eleven and The Bohemyth.
K.V. Skene
K.V. Skene’s recent publications include You Can Almost Hear Their Voices (Indigo Dreams Publishing, 2010). After eighteen years as an expat in England and Ireland, K.V. is now repatriated and writes from Toronto, Canada.
Kangni Alem
Kangni Alem is an award-winning Togolese writer, critic and playwright. He founded the Atelier Théâtre de Lomé in 1989. He has published five novels and three collections of short stories, the most recent of which is ‘Britney Spears’ Sandwich’ (Lomé, 2019). This is the first time his work has been translated into English.
Karen O’Connor
Karen O’Connor is a poet and short story writer. Her work has appeared in many magazines and anthologies and she is a founder member of Scribblers, a Tralee-based Writers’ Group. Her first collection, Fingerprints (On Canvas), was published by Doghouse in April 2005.
Karl Parkinson
Karl Parkinson’s work has been published in The Poetry Bus, Census, Revival and more. Leinster slam Champion 2010, wurm press published his chapbook, ‘A Sacrament Of Song’, in 2011.
Kate Dempsey
Kate Dempsey’s poetry is published in many journals in Ireland and the UK. Prizes include The Plough Prize, Hennessy New Irish Writing Award shortlisting. Her debut collection, The Space Between, was published by Doire Press in 2016 from which she had a poem selected as highly commended for the Forward Prize. She runs the Poetry Divas, a glittery collective of women poets who blur the wobbly boundary between page and stage.
Kate Feld
Kate Feld’s essays, poems and short fiction have appeared in minor literature[s], Neon, Banshee, Entropy and The Lonely Crowd. A native of Vermont, she lives in Manchester where she runs creative nonfiction project The Real Story. She tweets @katefeld.
Kate Miller
Kate Miller is a PhD student and tutor at Goldsmith’s College, London. In 2008 she won the Edwin Morgan International Poetry Prize and in 2009 the Silver Wyvern at Poetry on the Lake.
Kate Newmann
Kate Newmann has published four books, the most recent being a collection of poetry, I Am a Horse (Arlen House). She teaches creative writing to both children and adults, and is co-director of the Summer Palace Press.
Kate Quigley
Kate Quigley is a student of NUI Galway, but originally comes from County Meath. Her previous work has consisted mostly of poetry and drama. Her one act play, Three, won several awards at the Jerome Hynes One Act Play Series last year.
Katelyn O’Neill
Katelyn O’Neill, 21, is a final year Creative Writing student at NUI Galway, pursuing a Masters at City University of London. She is working on a first collection, and has had work featured in ‘The Stinging Fly’, ‘Burning Jade’ and the ‘Kilkenny Poetry Broadsheet’.
Katherine Duffy
Katherine Duffy’s second collection, Sorrow’s Egg, was published by Dedalus Press in 2011. Recent work has appeared in Magma, Orbis, The Rialto and The Lonely Crowd. She also writes fiction, in both English and Irish, and won the Hennessy Award in 2006. www.kateduv.com
Kathleen MacMahon
Kathleen MacMahon is the author of two best-selling novels. Her first book, This Is How It Ends, was nominated for two Bord Gáis Energy Irish Book Awards and for the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year.
Kathleen Murray
Kathleen Murray lives in Dublin. Her story, ‘You Just Wouldn’t Know’ featured in Issue 19 of The Stinging Fly, and her work has been published in the anthologies The Incredible Hides in Every House and These are our Lives. Kathleen was the winner of the Fish Short Story Prize in 2006/2007 and was shortlisted for the Davy Byrnes Irish Writing Award in 2009. She received an Arts Council bursary in 2010.
Kathryn Cahill
Kathryn Cahill was born in Dublin. A recent graduate of Middlesex University’s BA Writing Programme, she has also worked as a bookseller for a number of years and has lived in the USA and the Middle East.
Kathryn Hamann
Kathryn Hamann is an Australian poet whose most recent collection, Where Shadows Go (The Grumpy Poet’s Guide to Illness), was published by Mono Unlimited in August 2013. She is currently working on Lady in Waiting, a series of poems telling the story of her mother-in-law who had Lewy Body dementia.
Kathryn Paulsen
Kathryn Paulsen’s poetry and prose have appeared in New Letters, West Branch, and Riptide among others, and may currently be read in Saint Ann’s Review, Humber, and Spillway. She lives in New York City but has roots in many places, including County Cork. ramblesandrevels.blogspot.com
Kathy D’Arcy
Kathy D’Arcy is a Cork poet and IRC doctoral student in Creative Writing in UCC, where she teaches with the Women’s Studies department. She has previously worked as a doctor and with homeless young people. Her play ‘This is My Constitution’ was performed at a Dáil Eireann briefing during the constitutional convention on gender. She is involved in the Pro-Choice campaign. Poetry collections Encounter (Lapwing), and The Wild Pupil (Bradshaw). www.kathydarcy.com
Katie Burnip
Katie Burnip is an Anglo Australian fiction writer, based in North London. She is currently working on her first collection of short stories.
Katie Curran
Katie Curran is a literature graduate. Her work has appeared in Banshee and The Liminal Review.
Katie Donovan
Katie Donovan lives in Dublin and works as a journalist with The Irish Times. She has published two collections with Bloodaxe Books, Watermelon Man (1993) and Entering the Mare (1997). A third collection is due in 2002.
Katie O’Sullivan
Katie O’Sullivan is a Creative Writing student at NUI Galway. She has had poems published with NUIG’s Writer’s Society, SIN, and The Galway Review. She is currently working towards her first collection.