Gail McConnell has been announced as the winner of the 2022 John Pollard Foundation International Poetry Prize for her debut collection The Sun is Open - the announcement was made at an award ceremony in Trinity College Dublin earlier this month.

The Sun Is Open (Penned in the Margins) focuses on the life and death of the poet's father, who was murdered by the IRA outside their Belfast home in 1984. Moving between child and adult perspectives, the collection of poetry pieces together his history and life.

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Announcing the 2022 winner, chair of the judging panel, Professor Eoin McNamee, Director of the Trinity Oscar Wilde Centre, said: "Out of a very strong shortlist the panel recognised the authority and lyric command of The Sun Is Open. Working on the very edge of what can be said, The Sun Is Open is both a work of adamantine witness and a patient unearthing of what is rare and beautiful. This is a work of gravity and importance and we are delighted to have the opportunity to acknowledge it."

Winner Gail McConnell said: "I am deeply honoured to be the fourth recipient of the John Pollard Foundation International Poetry Prize for The Sun is Open. This book swirls around an autobiographical event: my father’s murder by the IRA outside our Belfast home in 1984.

"Using newspaper reports, Hansard, fragments of the Psalms, my father’s student diaries and other public and private materials archived in a 'dad box’, it moves between child and adult voices to try to piece together a history and a life. I started my career as a critic of Irish poetry and swerved into writing poems as I approached the age at which my father died. It means a great deal to me to be awarded an Irish prize, judged by writers and critics whose work addresses the complexities of this place – this place where, as Louis MacNeice put it, ‘history never dies’ and where one hopes to find what Yeats called ‘a passionate syntax for passionate subject-matter’."

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Watch: Gail McConnell reads Begin from The Sun is Open

This is the fourth year of the prize, which is awarded annually for an outstanding debut collection of poetry in the English language. Valued at €10,000, the prize is sponsored by the John Pollard Foundation and administered by the Trinity Oscar Wilde Centre in the School of English at Trinity.