Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize from Poetry magazine and the Adam Morgan Literary Citizen Award from the Chicago Review of Books. Rooney’s criticism can be found in The New York Times, The Minnesota Star Tribune, The Brooklyn Rail, Chicago magazine, the Los Angeles Review of Books, and beyond. She lives in Chicago with her spouse, the writer Martin Seay, and teaches English and creative writing at DePaul University.
Rooney's new novel is Man Overboard!.
[The Page 99 Test: Live Nude Girl; The Page 99 Test: For You, for You I Am Trilling These Songs; My Book, The Movie: For You, for You I Am Trilling These Songs; My Book, The Movie: Lillian Boxfish Takes a Walk; The Page 69 Test: Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey; My Book, The Movie: Cher Ami and Major Whittlesey; Writers Read: Kathleen Rooney (July 2022); The Page 69 Test: Where Are the Snows; Writers Read: Kathleen Rooney (September 2022); The Page 69 Test: From Dust to Stardust; My Book, The Movie: From Dust to Stardust; Q&A with Kathleen Rooney; Writers Read: Kathleen Rooney (September 2023); The Page 69 Test: Man Overboard!]
At Lit Hub the author tagged nine great "accounts of people lost at sea, struggling to be found." One title on the list:
Outerbridge Reach by Robert StoneRead about the other books on Rooney's list at Lit Hub.
Everybody read this thriller so we can all talk about it. Cool, dry, sexy, and philosophical, it tells the story of ex-Navy Vietnam War veteran Owen Browne’scourageous yet foolish attempt to win a highly publicized race by sailing solo around the world. It’s like if Joan Didion wrote manly adventure stories. Robert Stone said he based this, his fifth novel, loosely on the real-life businessman and amateur sailor Donald Crowhurst, but the genius of his fictional approach lies not only in the character of Browne, but also in those of Browne’s ambitious wife Anne and of Ron Strickland, the sleazy countercultural documentarian that Browne’s boat-manufacturer employer hires to make a film about the feat.
Dread hangs over this book like fog over the sea. In the end, the story is as much about how, if at all, a person can make meaning in a meaningless world as it is about trying not to drown: “Carefully, he examined his imagined positions on the chart. All the stories were embroidered, so it was said. Sailors privately ridiculed each other’s accounts. No one had ever brought the truth ashore. It was not to be had.”
--Marshal Zeringue
