Author: Christopher Nolan (Irish Author)

Christopher Nolan (Irish author)

Date of birth: 6 Sep 1965
Date of death: 20 Feb 2009
Website:

Christopher Nolan was an Irish poet and author. He was not a media fixture and certainly not one of those writers making appearances at the literary salons. He was a Dublin homebody. But what an astounding person Christopher Nolan was.

Nolan was born with cerebral palsy, could not speak, nor control his extremities. Confined to a wheelchair, he was the type of person our society looks at with pity or largely ignores. Thankfully, his family never saw him that way. They loved him unconditionally, interacted with him and taught him as one would any child. He would go on to school, though no one fully appreciated his mental acuity.

A drug was discovered that allowed Nolan to move one muscle in his neck. (Bono of U2, who attended school with Nolan wrote the song “Miracle Drug” about the boy). At the age of 11 he was equipped with a “unicorn stick” which was fastened to his head. With it Nolan would peck at a typewriter. His mother had to apply pressure to his chin to stabilize the boy’s head, allowing him to work his art. It was a torturous process, taking him more than 15 minutes to produce one word on the page. And what words they were.

He published his first book at 15, a collection of poems appropriately titled “Dam-burst of Dreams.” His second book won Britain’s prestigious “Whitbread Book of the Year:” in 1988. It was called “Under the Eye of the Clock,” a biographical work in which he refers to himself as Joseph Meehan. It was later adapted for the stage and performed as Torchlight and Laser Beams. Nolan followed this in 1999 with a critically acclaimed novel, The Banyan Tree, which spanned three generations of a rural Irish family.

Christopher Nolan died at the age of 43 after a piece of salmon became trapped in his airway.

Sources: [Raymond's Blog][1] - [The Guardian UK][2]


[1]: http://www.raymondarroyo.com/blog/2009/02/christopher_nolan_the_unicorn.html
[2]: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/feb/20/christopher-nolan-dies


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