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Published 14:00 28 May 2026 BST
Updated 14:06 28 May 2026 BST
Add us as a preferred source on Google »Thirst Trap by Gráinne O’Hare has won the 2026 Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year Award.
The announcement was made at the opening night of the 55th anniversary of Listowel Writers’ Week. The festival was officially opened by award-winning Irish broadcast journalist and television presenter Miriam O’Callaghan, with acclaimed novelist Colm Tóibín among those in attendance.
Set against the pressures and contradictions of contemporary life, Thirst Trap was selected from a shortlist that reflected the depth and variety of current Irish fiction. Judges praised the novel for its intelligence, emotional precision and distinctive voice.
“Congratulations to Gráinne O’Hare on winning the 2026 Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year Award for Thirst Trap,” said Catherine Keogh, Chief Corporate Affairs Officer, Kerry.
“It is especially encouraging to see such a distinctive new voice emerge, continuing the remarkable tradition of Irish authors celebrated through Listowel Writers’ Week. All this year’s nominees were outstanding, and as Kerry marks 30 years of sponsoring this award, we are proud to support original Irish voices and the enduring impact of Irish storytelling.”
The Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year Award is recognised as one of Ireland’s most significant literary honours and carries a prize fund of €20,000.
Presented annually as part of Ireland’s oldest literary and arts festival, the award continues to celebrate exceptional Irish fiction and the enduring strength of the novel form in Irish writing.
This year’s shortlist also included Conversation with the Sea by Hugo Hamilton, The Wardrobe Department by Elaine Garvey, Ordinary Saints by Niamh Ní Mhaoilchoin and The Boy from the Sea by Garrett Carr. The award was adjudicated by former First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon and acclaimed novelist and essayist Andrew O’Hagan.
Throughout the festival week, streets, cafés, pubs, bookshops and public spaces across Listowel become places of literary exchange, where established authors and first-time visitors meet in readings, workshops and informal conversations that extend late into the evening.
Over the coming days, the festival programme will feature public interviews, theatre, poetry, music, children’s events, creative workshops and literary discussions across venues throughout the town.
The festival is supported by the Arts Council of Ireland and Fáilte Ireland.
Read our review of Thirst Trap here.
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