Anne Enright: ‘When I was eight I wanted to be a boy, so that I could be anything I wanted’

Anne Enright: ‘When I was eight I wanted to be a boy, so that I could be anything I wanted’

The Irish author on the dark side of male power, lying to a class of six-year-olds, and a run-in with a boy-racer cop

Born in Dublin, Anne Enright, 61, studied at Trinity College and for an MA in creative writing at the University of East Anglia. In 1991, her story collection The Portable Virgin won the Rooney prize for Irish literature. In 2007, her fourth novel, The Gathering, took the Man Booker. Her latest novel, The Wren, The Wren, won this year’s Writer’s prize for fiction and was shortlisted for the Women’s prize. On 28 September, she appears at the North Cornwall book festival. She is married with two children and lives in Dublin.

When were you happiest?
A few weeks ago, we spent a long weekend going around West Cork, and I was so happy it amazed me. My husband doesn’t always make me happy around the house, but add a road and some scenery and the combination can be very powerful.

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