Colum McCann
Colum McCann is an Irish writer of literary fiction. He was born in Dublin, Ireland, and currently resides in New York. He is known as an international writer who believes in the "democracy of storytelling." He has won numerous awards, including the U.S. National Book Award and the International Dublin Literary Award, and his work has been published in over 40 languages as well as being published in many American and international publications. He also is the co-founder and president of Narrative 4, an international empathy education nonprofit.
McCann is the author of eight novels, including Apeirogon, TransAtlantic and the National Book Award-winning Let the Great World Spin. He has also written three collections of short stories, including Thirteen Ways of Looking, released in October 2015. American Mother was released in March 2024 and tells the story of Diane Foley, whose son, James Foley, was captured and killed by ISIS while serving as a freelance combat reporter in Syria. His latest novel, Twist, was released in March 2025.
Early life and education
McCann’s mother is from Derry in Northern Ireland, and he spent summers with his family there. His father, Sean McCann, was features editor for the Evening Press newspaper in Dublin, and a prolific author. Colum remembers following his father around the newsroom and seeing the writing process in action. McCann started writing at age eleven, when he rode his bike around Dun Laoghaire reporting on local football matches for The Irish Press.Despite his father's advice to "not become a journalist", McCann began his career as a newspaper writer. He studied journalism at the College of Commerce in Rathmines, Dublin. While at school, he wrote for a number of newspapers, including the Irish Independent and the Evening Herald, and in 1983 he was named "Young Journalist of the Year". McCann has said that his time in newspapers gave him an excellent platform from which to launch a career in fiction.
Career
Move to the U.S.
McCann moved to the United States in the summer of 1986 to become a fiction writer. He first lived in Hyannis, Massachusetts, where he worked on a golf course and as a cab driver. That summer, he bought a typewriter and tried to write "the great Irish American novel", but quickly realized that he wasn't up to the task and that he'd need "to get some experience beyond my immediate white-bread world". Between 1986 and 1988 he took a bicycle across the United States, travelling 12,000 kilometres. "Part of the reason for the trip was simply to expand my lungs emotionally", he said, to come in contact with what he calls "a true democracy of voices".During the trip, he stayed with Native Americans in Gallup, New Mexico, lived with Amish people in Pennsylvania, fixed bikes in Colorado, and dug ditches to help fight fires in Idaho. He found that the people he met would confide their deepest secrets in him, even though they had just met. He credits those voicesand that tripwith developing his ability to listen to other people.
In 1988, he moved to Brenham, Texas, where he worked as a wilderness educator with at-risk youth. He spent two years finishing his undergraduate education at University of Texas at Austin and was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa. While at UT, a story he published in a campus literary magazine was included in Britain's Best Short Stories of 1993, an early success in his young literary career.
Early works
In 1993, McCann moved to Japan with his wife Allison, whom he had married the previous year. The couple both taught English, and McCann worked on finishing his first short-story collection, Fishing the Sloe-Black River, and started his first novel, Songdogs. After a year and a half, the couple moved back to New York City where he, his wife and their three childrenIsabella, John Michael, and Christianstill reside. In 1994, following the publication of Fishing the Sloe-Black River, McCann won the Rooney Prize, which is awarded to an "emerging Irish writer under forty years of age" with "an outstanding body of work".Though McCann's early works were well-reviewed, they were not commercially successful enough to support him full-time. Throughout the 1990s, McCann wrote plays and film scripts, including the Veronica Guerin bio-pic When the Sky Falls and the play Flaherty's Windows, which ran for six weeks Off-Broadway.
Finding success as a novelist
This Side of Brightness was McCann's first international bestseller. The novel revolves around the New York City subway, following the "sandhogs" who built its tunnels in the early 1900s and the homeless people who lived in the tunnels in the 1980s. He was inspired by two instances in the early 1900s when men were blown out of subway tunnels into rivers due to explosions. While researching the novel, McCann descended into the subway tunnels three or four times per week. He recalled that, "Being Irish helped meI was never seen as part of the established order, the system. I was outside. And they were outsiders too. So often I felt aligned with the people who were living underground."In 2000, McCann released Everything in This Country Must, a collection of two short stories and a novella about The Troubles. He grounded the three stories in the conflict, but maintains "an imaginative distance" between reality and his writing, a common sentiment in his works. McCann teamed up with Gary McKendry to turn the collection's titular story . After its 2004 release, the film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film in the 77th Academy Awards.
McCann's next novel, Dancer, is a fictionalized account of Rudolf Nureyev's life. McCann spent the summer of 2001 teaching English in Russia to research the novel. The book was published on the tenth anniversary of Nureyev's death.
For his 2006 novel Zoli, McCann expanded on previously explored themes such as exile, social outcasting, empathy, and fictionalizing historical events. The main character is a fictionalization of Polish-Romani poet Bronisława Wajs. While researching the novel, McCann spent two months in Europe visiting Romani camps.
''Let the Great World Spin'' and international recognition
McCann was a Thomas Hunter Writer in Residence at Hunter College, New York.McCann's seventh book vaulted him into the international spotlight. Let the Great World Spin is set on 7 August 1974, the morning that Philippe Petit walked on a high wire between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City. The novel follows characters who live in New York City, some of whom saw Petit's walk. The book is an allegory to 9/11, but only mentions the attacks in one line. McCann's father-in-law worked in the North Tower and walked up to McCann's apartment on the Upper East Side after escaping the building. McCann's young daughter said her grandfather was "burning from the inside out", a line that struck McCann as a beautiful metaphor for the nation.
Let the Great World Spin was received with great critical acclaim. For the book, McCann won the 2009 National Book Award for Fiction, the first Irish-born writer to take home the award. The novel also won the 2011 International Dublin Literary Award, among many others. J. J. Abrams discussed working with McCann to make the novel into a movie.
2010s writings
In 2010, McCann put his words in a different medium, collaborating with Alonzo King to put on a ballet titled Writing Ground. The show, part of the Ballets de Monte Carlo, was put up by Alonzo King LINES Ballet. McCann's poetry is in the ballet's program but was not spoken in the dances itself. Instead, the dances were set to sacred music from different global cultures.In 2013, McCann published his eighth book, TransAtlantic. Like many of McCann's other books, the novel uses multiple characters and voices to tell a story based on real events. The book tells the intertwined stories of Alcock and Brown, the visit of Frederick Douglass to Ireland in 1845/46, and the story of the Irish peace process as negotiated by Senator George Mitchell in 1998. At first, McCann thought about just writing about Douglass's visit, but he said "then it would have been a historical novel and... hate the term... It just seems steeped in aspic. I mean every novel's a historical novel anyway. But calling something a historical novel seems to put mittens on it, right? It puts manners on it. And you don't want your novels to be mannered." McCann lived just a few blocks from Senator Mitchell in New York City, but did not meet him until he finished a draft of the book.
In the summer of 2014, McCann was assaulted outside a hotel in New Haven, Connecticut, while trying to help a woman who was being beaten up on the street. McCann told The Irish Times that "The irony of it all is that I was at a conference on 'Empathy' at Yale University with a non-profit I’m involved in, Narrative 4." At this point, he had already started writing his next short story collection, Thirteen Ways of Looking. The book contains three short stories and a novella, each beginning with a stanza from Wallace Stevens's poem, "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird". Though the titular story is about an on-street assault, he wrote it before being attacked. After Thirteen Ways of Looking
Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award 2016.
Each week throughout 2016, McCann wrote a blog post giving a piece of advice to young writers. The edited collection, Letters to a Young Writer, was published by Random House in 2017.
In 2019, McCann returned to playwriting, collaborating with Aedin Moloney to write Yes! ''Reflections of Molly Bloom. The one-woman show is adapted from James Joyce's novel Ulysses'' and centers around the Molly Bloom soliloquy. The show ran at the Irish Repertory Theatre in 2019, online in 2020, and again at the Irish Rep in 2022.