Conor Kostick | |
---|---|
Born | Conor Kostick 26 June 1964 Chester, Cheshire, England |
Occupation | Writer, historian |
Citizenship | Irish |
Genre | Fantasy, science fiction, LitRPG, children's literature |
Notable works | Epic |
Conor Kostick (born 26 June 1964) is a historian and writer living in Dublin. He is the author of many works of history and fiction. A former chairperson of the Irish Writers Union and member of the board of the National Library of Ireland, he has won a number of awards.
Kostick is the eldest of two boys born to teachers Gerrie and Marjorie Kostick in Chester, England. His father was Jewish-Irish, brought up in Dublin but having moved to the UK in the 1950s, where he became a physical education teacher, while his mother was a teacher of maths. [1] One set of grandparents were Polish Jews, who moved to Ireland to escape pogroms. [2] Kostick attended a local comprehensive school in Chester. [3]
Conor Kostick was the editor of Socialist Worker in Ireland and a reviewer for the Journal of Music in Ireland. [4]
A historian, he holds a doctorate, and has lectured and researched at Trinity College Dublin. [4] He has been awarded research fellowships by the Irish Research Council and the University of Nottingham. [5]
In August 2018, he was recruited by the UK's Ockham Publishing to lead a new imprint, Level Up publishing, with a remit to publish LitRPG. [6]
Epic, a LitRPG volume, was his first novel and was awarded a place on the International Board on Books for Young People Honours list for 2006 [7] and on the Booklist Best Fantasy Books for Youth list for 2007. [8] It sold more than 100,000 copies. [5] The sequel to Epic is Saga, first published in Ireland late in 2006; Edda, published 5 years later, in 2011, completed the 'Avatar Chronicles' trilogy. [9]
Conor Kostick was a designer for the world's first live action role-playing game, Treasure Trap. [10]
Kostick was twice chairperson of the Irish Writers Union. He was awarded the Farmleigh writer's residency for the summer of 2010. [11] [5] In 2015, Kostick was made chairperson of the Irish Copyright Licensing Agency.
He was President of the Irish Jury for the EU Prize for Literature in 2015, [12] and in that year too he was appointed to the Board of the National Library of Ireland. [13]
In 2018, the Kerala Literature Festival, India, chose to showcase Irish literature and Conor Kostick was one of seven Irish writers invited to participate. [14] In 2019, Conor Kostick again was president of the Irish Jury of the EU Prize for Literature. [15]
At their 2009 awards, the Reading Association of Ireland gave Kostick the Special Merit Award 'in recognition of his significant contribution to writing for children in Ireland.' [9]
Kostick was a nominee for the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award 2012 [16] and 2013. [17]
As a historian, Kostick's awards include a gold medal from Trinity College Dublin, [4] first prize in the 2001 Dublinia Medieval Essay Competition; fellowships from the Irish Research Council and the University of Nottingham; a Marie Curie Career Integration Grant; [18] and, in 2015, the British Academy's Rising Star Engagement Award. [19]
A former winner of Manorcon (2000), now one of Europe's grand prix Diplomacy events, [20] Conor Kostick was a member of the Irish team that won the Diplomacy National World Cup in 2012. [21]
He is the brother of the playwright Gavin Kostick [22] and a member of Independent Left. [23]