Conor O'Clery

Conor O'Clery is an Irish journalist and writer.

Background

Born in Belfast, Conor O'Clery graduated from Queen's University Belfast in 1972. He was deputy editor of The Gown, the QUB student newspaper.

Career

Conor worked for The Irish Times for over 30 years in various positions, including news editor and foreign correspondent based in London, Moscow, Washington, D.C., Beijing and New York City.

He wrote for The New Republic from Moscow, contributed columns to Newsweek International, and has been a frequent commentator on broadcast channels BBC, NPR and CNN.

Conor won several awards, including Journalist of the Year, twice, in Ireland: first, in 1987, for his reporting of the Soviet Union, and, secondly, in 2002, for reporting the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center in New York, which he witnessed from his office three blocks away.

O'Clery has written a number of books.

He lives in Dublin with his Russian-born Armenian wife, Zhanna.[1]

Bibliography

  • The Shoemaker and his Daughter, August 2018
  • The Star Man, 2016
  • Moscow, December 25, 1991: The Last Day of the Soviet Union, 2011
  • May You Live in Interesting Times, 2008
  • The Billionaire Who Wasn't: How Chuck Feeney Secretly Made and Gave Away a Fortune, 2007
  • Panic at the Bank: How John Rusnak Lost AIB $700 Million (co-authored with Siobhan Creaton), 2002
  • Ireland in Quotes: A History of the Twentieth Century, 1999
  • The Greening of the White House, 1997
  • Daring Diplomacy: Clinton's Secret Search for Peace in Ireland, 1997
  • America, A Place Called Hope?, 1993
  • Melting Snow: An Irishman in Moscow, 1991
  • Phrases Make History Here: Century of Irish Political Quotations, 1886-1986
gollark: People's willingness to tolerate annoying things is limited.
gollark: I do not think that is accurate.
gollark: Yes. I'm aware some people didn't, but it would be significantly worse if they did more of them.
gollark: They probably *won't* be if the perception is that they will just do it arbitrarily and repeatedly for ages and it just slows down things at best.
gollark: Anyway, people have seemingly been mostly willing to engage in obeying lockdown when there was a clearish danger and it seemed like a temporary onetime thing.

References

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