Bruce Arnold OBE |
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Born |
London |
6 September 1936
Occupation | Journalist and author |
Nationality | British |
Education | Kingham Hill School |
Alma mater | Trinity College, Dublin |
Subject | Literary criticism and art criticism |
Notable works | A Singer at the Wedding, The Song of the Nightingale, The Muted Swan |
Notable awards | Fellow of Trinity College Dublin, Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, honorary member of the Royal Hibernian Academy, honorary doctorate from University College Dublin |
Bruce Arnold (born 6 September 1936 in London) is an English journalist and author who has lived in Ireland since 1957. His main expertise is in the fields of literary criticism and art criticism.
In 1983 it emerged that his telephone had been bugged by Charles Haughey in the Irish phone tapping scandal. He and the other bugged journalists were considered to have "anti-national" views.
Arnold was educated at Kingham Hill School and at Trinity College, Dublin, where he studied modern languages. His wife Mavis Arnold (née Ysabel Mavis Cleave) was also a journalist.
Arnold has worked for the main Irish newspapers based in Dublin – The Irish Times from 1965; The Irish Press and the Sunday Independent. He also acted as Dublin correspondent of The Guardian. He has edited Hibernia and the Dublin Magazine (1962–68; formerly The Dubliner).
(Fiction)
(Non-fiction)
Quasi-autobiographical based on a selection of his father's letters. Free download from http://www.brucearnold.ie/pages/books/he-that-is-down.html
He is an honorary Fellow of Trinity College Dublin, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and an honorary member of the Royal Hibernian Academy. He was awarded an honorary doctorate by University College Dublin (UCD) and an OBE.