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In this book, O’Sullivan recounts her most memorable interactions of patients with severe physical symptoms that she found to come from their mental state in a total of twelve chapters. She starts the book introducing herself and providing information on her medical career and her passion for neurology and mental disorders.
It's All in Your Head: True Stories of Imaginary Illness, [3] published by Chatto & Windus [4] in 2015, is O'Sullivan's first book. It was published to positive reviews. [5] [6] It was awarded the 2016 Wellcome Book Prize, [7] the 2016 Royal Society of Biology general book prize [8] and was shortlisted for the Books are my Bag Readers award 2016 [9]
O'Sullivan at a 2014 book signing. O'Sullivan has written three crime novels in collaboration with author Emlyn Rees: [90] Framed (2016), [91] Double Kiss (2017), [92] and The Break (2018). Although the novels are not autobiographical, they are loosely based on his early experiences and family life. [91] He has also written two autobiographies.
The O'Sullivan Twins is the second in the St. Clare's series of children's novels by Enid Blyton. It was first published in 1942 by Methuen. [1] Plot summary
The ruins of the house in which Muiris Ó Súilleabháin grew up on the Great Blasket Island.. Muiris Ó Súilleabháin (Irish: [ˈmˠɪɾʲɪʃ oː sˠuːl̠ʲəˈwaːnʲ]; 19 February 1904 – 25 June 1950), anglicised as Maurice O'Sullivan, was an Irish author famous for his Irish language memoir of growing up on the Great Blasket Island and in Dingle, County Kerry, off the western coast of ...
O'Sullivan, having lived a longish life as a more or less well-to-do rentier, in latish middle age found himself ruined, wrote his last book (Opinions) under terrible conditions, and, dying in Paris, ended anonymously in the common pit for the cadavers of paupers. [4] John Cowper Powys listed The Good Girl at number 97 in his One Hundred Best ...
O'Sullivan lectured at Victoria University of Wellington (VUW) from 1963 to 1966, and the University of Waikato between 1968 and 1978. [12] [5] He served as literary editor of the NZ Listener from 1979 to 1980, and then between 1981 and 1987 won a series of writer's residencies and research fellowships in universities in Australia and New Zealand: VUW, University of Tasmania, Deakin University ...
Hounded introduces the character of Atticus O'Sullivan and his world, a secret history where magic, vampires, werewolves, gods, and other supernatural elements exist (albeit in hiding). O'Sullivan, the last Druid and proprietor of Third Eye Books and Herbs occult shop, comes into contact with many of the supernatural characters of his home city ...