Sinead Moriarty Books In Order
Book links take you to Amazon. As an Amazon Associate I earn money from qualifying purchases.Publication Order of Devlin Sisters Books
Me and My Sisters | (2011) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The Secrets Sisters Keep | (2014) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Emma Hamilton Books
The Baby Trail | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
A Perfect Match | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The Right Fit | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
From Here to Maternity | (2006) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Mad About You | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Standalone Novels
In My Sister's Shoes | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Whose Life Is It Anyway? / Keeping it in the Family | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Pieces of My Heart | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Sweet Child of Mine / This Child of Mine | (2012) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The Way We Were | (2015) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The Good Mother | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Our Secrets and Lies | (2018) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Seven Letters | (2019) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
About Us | (2021) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The New Girl | (2021) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The Truth About Riley | (2022) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Finding Hope | (2023) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Good Sisters | (2024) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Short Stories/Novellas
The Way We Are | (2016) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Children's Literature and Culture Books
Regendering the School Story | (1996) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Case of Peter Rabbit | (1998) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Narrating Africa | (1999) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
How Picturebooks Work | (2000) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Children's Films | (2000) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Empire's Children | (2000) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Presence of the Past | (2000) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Poetics of Childhood | (2002) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
A Past Without Shadow | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Brown Gold | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Making of the Modern Child | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Ursula K. Le Guin Beyond Genre | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Diana Wynne Jones | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Ursula K. Le Guin Beyond Genre | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Youth of Darkest England | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Myth, Symbol, and Meaning in Mary Poppins | (2006) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Voracious Children | (2006) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
National Character in South African English Children's Literature | (2006) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
A Critical History of French Children's Literature: Volume Two: 1830-Present | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Representing Africa in Children's Literature | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Once Upon a Time in a Different World: Issues and Ideas in African American Children’s Literature | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Outside Child, In and Out of the Book | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
A Critical History of French Children's Literature: Volume One: 1600-1830 | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Death, Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary Adolescent Literature | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
From Nursery Rhymes to Nationhood | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Enterprising Youth | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Crossover Novel | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Crossover Fiction: Global and Historical Perspectives | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Constructing Adolescence in Fantastic Realism | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Critical Approaches to Food in Children's Literature | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Neo-Imperialism in Children-s Literature About Africa | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Shakespeare in Children's Literature | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Representations of Technology in Science Fiction for Young People | (2009) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Fundamental Concepts of Children's Literature Research | (2009) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Translation Under State Control | (2009) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Children's Fiction about 9/11 | (2009) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Power, Voice and Subjectivity in Literature for Young Readers | (2009) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Juvenile Literature and British Society, 1850-1950 | (2009) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Children's Book Business | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
New Directions in Picturebook Research | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Role of Translators in Children’s Literature | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Humor in Contemporary Junior Literature | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Innocence, Heterosexuality, and the Queerness of Children's Literature | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Irish Children's Literature and Culture | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Reading the Adolescent Romance | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Contemporary English-Language Indian Children's Literature | (2011) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Beyond Pippi Longstocking | (2011) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Myth of Persephone in Girls' Fantasy Literature | (2011) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Landscape in Children's Literature | (2012) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Boys in Children's Literature and Popular Culture | (2012) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Picturing the Wolf in Children's Literature | (2012) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Textual Transformations in Children's Literature | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Retelling Stories, Framing Culture | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
: Characterizations of African Americans, 1830-1900 | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Place of Lewis Carroll in Children's Literature | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Contemporary Dystopian Fiction for Young Adults | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Rediscoveries in Children's Literature | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Second-Generation Memory and Contemporary Children's Literature: Ghost Images | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Sparing the Child: Grief and the Unspeakable in Youth Literature about Nazism and the Holocaust | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Beatrix Potter | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Transcending Boundaries | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Gothic in Children's Literature | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Utopian and Dystopian Writing for Children and Young Adults | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Recycling Red Riding Hood | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Representing the Holocaust in Children's Literature | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Ways of Being Male | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Inventing the Child | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Childhood and Children's Books in Early Modern Europe, 1550-1800 | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Feminine Subject in Children's Literature | (2013) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Pinocchio Goes Postmodern | (2014) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Russell Hoban/Forty Years | (2014) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Discourses of Postcolonialism in Contemporary British Children's Literature | (2014) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Embodying Gender and Age in Speculative Fiction | (2015) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Early Reader in Children's Literature and Culture | (2015) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Children's Literature and Culture of the First World War | (2015) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Big Smallness | (2016) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Future of the Nineteenth-Century Dream-Child: Fantasy, Dystopia, Cyberculture | (2016) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Canon Constitution and Canon Change in Children's Literature | (2016) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Fictions of Integration | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
New Directions in Children's Gothic | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
More Words about Pictures | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Origin Narratives: The Stories We Tell Children About Immigration and International Adoption | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Beloved Does Not Bite | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Affect, Emotion, and Children’s Literature | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Embodied Child: Readings in Children’s Literature and Culture | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Childhood and Pethood in Literature and Culture | (2017) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Victorian Era in Twenty-First Century Children’s and Adolescent Literature and Culture | (2018) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
‘The Right Thing to Read’: A History of Australian Girl-Readers, 1910-1960 | (2018) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Battling Girlhood | (2018) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Cyborg Saints | (2019) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Out of Reach | (2019) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Arctic in Literature for Children and Young Adults | (2020) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Terror and Counter-Terror in Contemporary British Children’s Literature | (2020) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
ChicaNerds in Chicana Young Adult Literature | (2020) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Rulers of Literary Playgrounds | (2020) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Antarctica in British Children’s Literature | (2020) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Sexuality in Literature for Children and Young Adults | (2021) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Dust Off the Gold Medal | (2021) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Poetics and Ethics of Anthropomorphism | (2021) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
The Figure of the Child in WWI American, British, and Canadian Children’s Literature | (2022) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Youth Fiction and Trans Representation | (2022) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Historical and Cultural Transformations of Russian Childhood | (2022) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Creative Writing in Schools | (2026) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
African American Children in American Political Life | (2026) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
+ Show All Books in this Series |
Publication Order of Anthologies
Sinead Moriarty is an Irish author that writes contemporary novels about the struggles of family life.
+Biography
Sinead Moriarty was born in 1971 in Dublin. Her parents were Aidan and Mary Moriarty. The author went to Trinity College in Dublin where she studied French and Spanish, eventually graduating with a Bachelor of Arts Degree.
Moriarty left Ireland afterward. She spent some time in Paris and London. She was working as a journalist at the time. It was during her time in London that the author wrote her first novel and piqued the interest of Penguin Books.
Moriarty has since made a home for herself in Dublin with her husband and three children. The author has won the Irish Independent Popular Fiction Award.
+Literary Career
It could be argued that Sinead Moriarty couldn’t have been anything other than a writer. After all, her mother was also an author. She specialized in children’s books and, as a child, Moriarty was fascinated by her mother’s career.
She would watch Mary Moriarty write at their kitchen table. She would follow the progress of her efforts, watching as a few paragraphs became entire chapters and those became an actual book that was eventually published and stocked in bookstores.
The process held a lot of appeal for the author and she found that all she dreamed of was that moment in her life when the opportunity to write her own life-changing novels would come her way.
Sinead Moriarty spent several years toying with the idea for her first book. She started working on it while she was working in London as a journalist. When she finally decided to give it a real shot, Moriarty took a writing course in order to refine her skills.
The decision bore fruit relatively quickly. Moriarty was fortunate to have a tutor who took a serious interest in her talents. He helped her nurture her craft and, once he saw what she could do, he encouraged her to go ahead and submit her work to a few prospective publishers.
Moriarty initially wrote her first book during her lunch hour, after work and any other period of time that she could spare. Once the fervor for publishing overtook her, she admits that she even began writing during her work hours.
Once her tutor and mentor gave her that final push to submit what she had produced so far, Moriarty heeded his words. If Sinead Moriarty needed a concrete sign to prove that fiction writing was her destiny, she got it when her submissions elicited an immediate response from Penguin.
When the offer from Penguin came, Moriarty was ecstatic but she did not let the excitement get to her head. Instead of taking Penguin’s deal, she chose to first get an agent. It took her a while but she eventually narrowed her options down to four individuals who she believed had the experience to represent her.
Finally, Moriarty settled on Gillon Aitken, a man she has come to like, trust and respect and who helped her maneuver the publishing complexities that followed. With her writing career finally taking off, the author went back to Dublin, settled into her home and began to lay the groundwork for her future novels.
Sinead Moriarty’s first book was called ‘The Baby Trail’. It followed the exploits of a couple struggling to conceive. That first book was based on Moriarty’s personal experience and that made the promotion and marketing aspects tricky, at least at the start.
Moriarty struggled to contend with the personal questions that audiences fired at her. She wasn’t quite ready to expose such a critical aspect of her life to the world. But over time, the author grew accustomed to the situation and actually found it rewarding to share some of her pain with other readers who admitted to encountering the same struggles.
Many of Sinead Moriarty’s books are about family. The author loves exploring the lives of real people, highlighting the unique struggles that can assault individuals within a family setting.
It takes Moriarty a year or even less to write a novel. She likes to edit as she goes. In fact, Moriarty cannot proceed to a new chapter until she is satisfied with her last chapter. The idea is for her to write the last line in her book knowing that she is truly finished and that she doesn’t have to go back and edit her work from scratch.
The author writes on a computer. The idea of writing longhand is appalling to her because her handwriting is pretty terrible, so much so that even she cannot read it. The author primarily gets her work done before one in the afternoon. She is most effective in the morning hours.
She depends on the internet for research. Though, were possible, she prefers interviewing people who have some sort of experience with the subject matter of whatever book she happens to be writing. While the internet is a powerful and convenient tool, interviews with real people allow Sinead Moriarty to gain an understanding of the emotions that drive the subject matter in question.
When Moriarty isn’t writing, she likes to do Yoga as a means of fighting stress. The author was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, so yoga is an important aspect of her life.
+The Baby Trail
Emma Hamilton, a makeup artist, was 33 when she decided to have a child with her husband James. Once she got off the pill in December, she was certain that she would be pregnant by January.
Emma begins to grow desperate when months of sexual activity fail to bear fruit. With her husband in tow, she begins a long and grueling journey to conceive a child involving hormonal treatments, herbal tea, and scheduled sex.
As their carefully laid plans go down the drain, Emma grows desperate. Her self-esteem plummets and she cannot even depend on her support team because her friends and family have plenty of problems of their own.
Emma begins to feel alienated from everyone until an unexpected event changes her world.
+Me and My Sisters
Julie is in desperate need of support from her sisters, but they do not seem to understand her. Julie was always the easy-going one among the Devlin sisters. But then she got married and had five boys.
Now her life is one long rollercoaster of stress and it doesn’t help that her marriage is suffering under the strain. Julie thinks her sisters are living perfect lives and that they do not understand her. She is in for a surprise.
Book Series In Order » Authors »