Caitriona O'Reilly
Influenced by Sylvia Plath, O’Reilly makes use of both received form and free verse in her explorations of nature and the self. In her 2004 anthology The New Irish Poets, editor Selina Guinness discusses O’Reilly’s The Nowhere Birds, noting “Although this book moves from childhood through adolescence and student travels to adult relationships, it charts this journey through a dream-world filled with natural imagery that either terrifies and repels, or that expresses libidinal desires intimately understood. At times eerie in their invocation of spiders, bats, and the claws of birds, these poems are drawn through such witch-like details to the edge of the known world, where they lift off into a surrealist vision of exemplary lyricism.”
Her debut collection, The Nowhere Birds (2001), won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, and The Sea Cabinet (2006) was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation and was shortlisted for the Irish Times Poetry Prize. She collaborated with David Wheatley on the chapbook The Three-Legged Dog (2003), and has also worked with visual artist Isabel Nolan.
O’Reilly, who has served as a contributing editor of the Irish poetry journal Metre and has also edited Poetry Ireland Review, works as a freelance writer and critic. She has taught at Wake Forest University and the Irish Writers’ Center in Dublin. O’Reilly divides her time between Wicklow and Dublin.
Discover this poet’s context and related poetry, articles, and media.
Poems By CAITRIONA O'REILLY
Poet Categorization
POET’S REGION Ireland
LIFE SPAN 1973–
If you disagree with this poet's categorization, make a suggestion.



