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[[Category:1927 births|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:1927 births|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:Living people|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:Living people|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:Irish writers|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:Irish Anglicans|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:Irish novelists|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:Irish novelists|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:Irish short story writers|Higgins, Aidan]]
[[Category:Irish short story writers|Higgins, Aidan]]

Revision as of 23:11, 17 May 2006

Aidan Higgins (born March 3, 1927) is an Irish writer.

His upbringing in a landed protestant family in Celbridge, County Kildare, Ireland, provided material for his first experimental novel, Langrishe, Go Down (1966), and was later adapted for television by British playwright Harold Pinter. His 1972 novel, Balcony of Europe was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.

Various writings have been collected and reprinted by the Dalkey Archive Press, including his three volume autobiography, A Bestiary, and a collection of fiction, Flotsam and Jetsam, both of which demonstrate his wide erudition and his experience of life and travel in South Africa, Germany and London which gives his writing a largely cosmopolitan feel, utilizing a range of European languages in turns of phrase.

He now lives in Kinsale, County Cork, and is a Saoi of Aosdána.