Joseph O'Neill (writer, born 1886)

O'Neill claimed later in his life that he was born in the Aran Islands, County Galway, Ireland, in 1886, but he was in fact born in the inland Galway town of Tuam, preferring, as a writer, the perceived romance of being born in the Gaelic-speaking islands. He became a school inspector and subsequently Secretary of the Department of Education in the newly formed Irish Free State. He wrote five novels, of which the best-known was Land Under England, a science-fiction account of a totalitarian society ruled by telepathic mind control. The novel combines elements of a "lost race" narrative (the descendants of a Roman legion live underground under the north of England) with fears of totalitarian control.[1] Land Under England has an anti-fascist subtext.[2] The novel was cited by Karl Edward Wagner as one of the thirteen best science-fiction horror novels.[3] His other SF novel, published in 1936, is the future-war story Day of Wrath. His other novels include the time travel (or timeslip novel) Wind From the North, in which the author is transported in a dreamlike fashion to Dublin or Dyflin in the period leading up to the Battle of Clontarf in 1014, and Philip, a biblical epic. Wind from the North was later a standard Irish primary school text in the 1950s, in an edition published by Browne & Nolan.

Joseph O'Neill was an Irish novelist.

He died on 6 May 1952.

Personal life

He was the husband of Mary Devenport O'Neill, poet and friend of W. B. Yeats, who consulted her when writing 'A Vision'. Devenport O'Neill was a noted writer in her own right.

List of works

  • Wind From the North (1934) [Jonathan Cape], published in the United States by Simon & Schuster.
  • Land under England (1935) Gollancz ISBN 0-14-008956-X
  • Day of Wrath (1936) Gollancz
  • Philip (1940) Gollancz
  • Chosen by the Queen (1947)
gollark: It wouldn't be very hard. I could probably write such a thing now.
gollark: Basically, you can set a setting to make it not boot from disks by default, then make a program which loads the code off the disk as if it is booting as normal but is really logging the code on the disk somewhere.
gollark: I could still get around that with 1337 h4xx.
gollark: I could probably get around that with enough work.
gollark: Either way, the real-world credit card system... honestly seems woefully insecure and the only reason it works most of the time is the law and people being somewhat trustworthy.

References

  1. Arthur O. Lewis, "O'Neill, Joseph", in Twentieth-Century Science-Fiction Writers by Curtis C. Smith. St. James Press, 1986, ISBN 0-912289-27-9 (p.553-4).
  2. "Anti-fascist SF" in Mark Bould, Sherryl Vint, (2011). Land Under England was a huge success on publication, and was consistently in print from the 1970's onwards. The Routledge Concise History of Science Fiction. Routledge, ISBN 0415435714 (p.23).
  3. N. G. Christakos, "Three By Thirteen: The Karl Edward Wagner Lists" in Black Prometheus: A Critical Study of Karl Edward Wagner, ed. Benjamin Szumskyj, Gothic Press 2007.

Further reading

Giffuni, C. "Joseph O'Neill, a Bibliography," The Journal of Irish Literature, Volume XVI Number 2 May 1987.

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