Cecelia Ahern
Author of P.S. I Love You
About the Author
Cecelia Ahern was born on September 30, 1981 in Dublin, Ireland. She received a degree in journalism and media communications from Griffith College Dublin. She wrote her first novel PS, I Love You at the age of 21. This novel was made into a movie starring Hilary Swank. Some of her other novels show more include If You Could See Me Now, A Place Called Here, There's No Place Like Here, and Thanks for the Memories. She won the 2005 Irish Post Award for Literature and a 2005 Corine Award for Where Rainbows End. She is also the co-creator and producer of the television show Samantha Who? (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Dmitry Rozhkov
Series
Works by Cecelia Ahern
livro ps eu te amo 3 copies
Destiny, tome 1 1 copy
Novels by Cecelia Ahern: Ps, I Love You, Thanks for the Memories, if You Could See Me Now, a Place Called Here (2010) 1 copy
An Open Book 1 copy
P. S. - Eu Amo-te 1 copy
La vie est un arc en ciel 1 copy
Ghost Story [novella] 1 copy
Sprachfreunde 3. Arbeitsheft. Neubearbeitung 2004. Berlin, Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (2004) 1 copy
P.S. Я люблю тебя 1 copy
Associated Works
The Book Lovers' Appreciation Society: Breast Cancer Care Short Story Collection (2009) — Contributor — 97 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Ahern, Cecelia
- Birthdate
- 1981-09-30
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Griffith College, Dublin (Journalism and Media Communications)
- Occupations
- novelist
TV Producer - Awards and honors
- Corine Award (2005)
Irish Post Award (Literature, 2005)
Fun Fearless Fiction Award (2007) - Relationships
- Ahern, Bertie (father)
- Short biography
- Cecelia Ahern was born on September 30, 1981 in Dublin, Ireland. She is the daughter of Bertie Ahern, Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister) since June 26,1997, and is the sister-in-law of Nicky Byrne of Irish popgroup Westlife, who is married to her older sister, Georgina Ahern. In 2000, Cecelia was part of the Irish pop-group Shimma, who finished third in the Irish national final for the Eurovision Song Contest. Before embarking on her writing career, Cecelia Ahern completed a Degree in Journalism and Media Communications.
At twenty-one, she wrote her debut novel PS, I Love You, published in January 2004, which was sold to over forty countries. The novel was one of the biggest-selling debut novels of 2004, reaching No.1 in Ireland and in the U.K. Sunday Times bestseller list and was selected for the Richard and Judy Summer Read campaign. It was also a bestseller throughout Europe and the U.S.A., staying on the best-seller list in Germany for over 52 weeks. For her debut novel, she was nominated for Best Newcomer 2004/05 at the British Book and in 2006, she was long-listed for the IMPAC award. The film of the same title was optioned by Warner Bros and Wendy Finerman Productions. It has now been made into a motion picture directed by Richard LaGravenese and starring Hilary Swank, Lisa Kudrow, Kathy Bates, Gerry Butler, Harry Connick Jr., Gina Gershon and Jeffrey Dean Morgan.
In November 2004, her second book, Where Rainbows End (U.S.A.: Love, Rosie / Rosie Dunne), also reached No.1 in Ireland and the UK, remaining at the top of the Irish bestsellers list for 12 weeks and again a bestseller internationally. For her second book, she won the 2005 Irish Post Award for Literature and a 2005 Corine Award for Where Rainbows End (Fur Immer Viellecht), which was voted by German readers. In November 2005, her third book, If You Could See Me Now was published and also became an international bestseller. In May 2007 Cosmopolitan U.S. honoured her with a Fun Fearless Fiction Award 2007 for her thrid book. It has been optioned by SB Films (London) Producer Simon Brooks.
In October 2006, her fourth novel, A Place Called Here, was a international number one bestseller and has gone straight to No.1 in U.K. and Ireland. It was published in U.S.A. under the title There's No Place Like Here. It is optioned by Touchstone with Warren Littlefield for a TV Drama series.
Cecelia has contributed with short stories to the following anthologies for which all her royalties go to charity: Irish Girls are Back in Town, Short and Sweet, Moments, Ladies Night 4, Girls Night in 2 and she has written a novella titled Mrs. Whippy.
Other published stories are The Production Line for Express Magazine, Every Year for Harrod's Magazine, The Things That I Remember for Woman's Own, Remembering Mum for Express Magazine, Mallard and May for Woman and Home.
Cecelia also is the co-creater (along with Donald Todd) and producer of the ABC half-hour comedy television show, Samantha Who? Stars: Christina Applegate, Jean Smart, Jennifer Esposito, Barry Watson, Kevin Dunn, Melissa McCarthy and Tim Russ.
Cecelia Ahern continues living in Dublin and is currently writing her next novel. - Nationality
- Ireland
- Birthplace
- Dublin, Ireland
- Places of residence
- Dublin, Ireland
- Map Location
- Ireland
Members
Reviews
Cecelia Ahern writes people who act like b*****s and a**holes and makes you like them. Somehow, she manages to show their humanity and the insecurities that led to the mistakes they made. She describes their vulnerabilities and their struggle to change and then leaves you with a few questions unanswered so the ending can be whatever you imagine it to be.
For me, her works are the discovery of the year. Here's to trying books from authors you haven't read before :)
For me, her works are the discovery of the year. Here's to trying books from authors you haven't read before :)
This was my first Cecilia Ahern, would you believe, and I wasn't sure what to expect. A light chick lit read, a happy ending, a little romance, a Christmas moral? Well, that last part was there for the taking, but I couldn't have been more wrong about the rest! Instead, what Ahern offers is a thoughtful portrayal of a family in meltdown, with a twist of magic that somehow never overwhelms the message of the story.
Lou Suffern is a workaholic. All day, every day, he slogs at his office, show more skipping from one meeting to another, from one task to the next, skilfully juggling everything and everyone in a feverish attempt to win the position - and the office - left vacant when his colleague had a breakdown. At night, he takes to the bars and restaurants of Dublin, cavorting with clients and flirting with women. The only thing he can't bring himself to do, it seems, is to go home and spend quality time with his wife and children.
Everything changes the day he meets Gabriel, a homeless man living outside his office building, and to his own great surprise, gives him not only his coffee but also a job in the busy mail room. But who is Gabe? He looks a little like Lou. He seems to know things about him and his life that no stranger could know, and he has the uncanny knack of popping up everywhere. Almost like he can be in two places at once - a talent Lou would love to possess...
This was definitely a more accomplished and better-written novel than I was, rather cynically, expecting. Lou is one of those characters we root for even though we hope we'll never be like him. Throughout the book I wanted to grab hold of him and shake him as he made his bad decisions and pushed his family further and further away through his own selfishness and ambition, and I was longing for him to turn things around before it was too late. I like the fact that we are left to draw our own conclusions about Gabe as well - is he some kind of magical figure of conscience? An angel, as his name suggests? In true magical realism style, we are simply left to wonder over the cryptic clues.
The only thing I really didn't like was Ahern's over-zealous use of imagery. Oh, how I hated it. She mixes her metaphors and scrambles her similes and seems to feel the need to describe EVERYTHING in reference to something else. This veers from laughably ridiculous to vaguely irritating to hideously jarring and back again, and lost the book a star for me. On the flip side, the characters and relationships are beautifully drawn, and the family and company circles through which Lou moves are pitch-perfect. It made me think, it made me cry, and the moral of the story is ever-relevant in today's fast-paced, consumer-driven society. Definitely a good novel for the run-up to Christmas! show less
Lou Suffern is a workaholic. All day, every day, he slogs at his office, show more skipping from one meeting to another, from one task to the next, skilfully juggling everything and everyone in a feverish attempt to win the position - and the office - left vacant when his colleague had a breakdown. At night, he takes to the bars and restaurants of Dublin, cavorting with clients and flirting with women. The only thing he can't bring himself to do, it seems, is to go home and spend quality time with his wife and children.
Everything changes the day he meets Gabriel, a homeless man living outside his office building, and to his own great surprise, gives him not only his coffee but also a job in the busy mail room. But who is Gabe? He looks a little like Lou. He seems to know things about him and his life that no stranger could know, and he has the uncanny knack of popping up everywhere. Almost like he can be in two places at once - a talent Lou would love to possess...
This was definitely a more accomplished and better-written novel than I was, rather cynically, expecting. Lou is one of those characters we root for even though we hope we'll never be like him. Throughout the book I wanted to grab hold of him and shake him as he made his bad decisions and pushed his family further and further away through his own selfishness and ambition, and I was longing for him to turn things around before it was too late. I like the fact that we are left to draw our own conclusions about Gabe as well - is he some kind of magical figure of conscience? An angel, as his name suggests? In true magical realism style, we are simply left to wonder over the cryptic clues.
The only thing I really didn't like was Ahern's over-zealous use of imagery. Oh, how I hated it. She mixes her metaphors and scrambles her similes and seems to feel the need to describe EVERYTHING in reference to something else. This veers from laughably ridiculous to vaguely irritating to hideously jarring and back again, and lost the book a star for me. On the flip side, the characters and relationships are beautifully drawn, and the family and company circles through which Lou moves are pitch-perfect. It made me think, it made me cry, and the moral of the story is ever-relevant in today's fast-paced, consumer-driven society. Definitely a good novel for the run-up to Christmas! show less
Can I just start out this review by saying that more books need to do what Ahern’s books do? She is so good at inserting some sort of magical element into everyday life and let’s be honest everyday life needs more magic. The Time of My Life is no exception. I went into this read knowing not a whole lot about what I would find inside. All I knew was that Ahern wrote it and, for the most part, I have had pretty good success with her novels. I also knew that it had a fairly cute, albeit show more misleading to me, cover. I’m probably alone here but based on the cover alone I thought for sure that this was a fictional tale that would remind me of Eat, Pray, Love. Maybe it was the bracelets?
Anyway, The Time of My Life is a tale about pathological liar, Lucy Silchester. Once upon a time Lucy’s life seemed to be on the right track, she had a fantastic apartment with the love of her life, a great job and her father’s approval. Then her boyfriend up and leaves her and she loses everything. Instead of just dealing she lies about everything. Her friends think that she left the boyfriend and just wanted to downsize. Her family, for the most part, think that she just wanted a new career challenge. Basically her life is a mess. Girlfriend is in major denial though. Lucky for Lucy everyone has someone who is the yin to their yang, who monitors their life and steps in if need be. The man who is Lucy’s life is in bad shape when we meet him, because her life is in such disarray. Together they work to make her life a life worth living.
First off, I love this idea of someone being your life. I love that this person’s appearance and well-being is directly influenced by your decisions. It’s just such a cute idea and the story was such a fun tale with some really great lines. Seriously, this novel had some freaking fantastic lines, references and nicknames. One of my favorite bits is the following:
". . . there was a smile on his face as bright as my new bathroom lightbulb which, given, on first read is a lame and unromantic simile, but when plunged in darkness for a year while on the toilet, a new lightbulb is a very welcoming and enlightening thing to have, not to mention useful."
Bottom Line
Basically, if you are looking for a fun, lighthearted read that actually makes you pause for moment and consider your own choices in life then The Time of My Life is a book that you will really enjoy. I liked this book so much that I’m actually thinking I need a physical copy to grace my bookshelf. That’s some coveted space my friends. show less
Anyway, The Time of My Life is a tale about pathological liar, Lucy Silchester. Once upon a time Lucy’s life seemed to be on the right track, she had a fantastic apartment with the love of her life, a great job and her father’s approval. Then her boyfriend up and leaves her and she loses everything. Instead of just dealing she lies about everything. Her friends think that she left the boyfriend and just wanted to downsize. Her family, for the most part, think that she just wanted a new career challenge. Basically her life is a mess. Girlfriend is in major denial though. Lucky for Lucy everyone has someone who is the yin to their yang, who monitors their life and steps in if need be. The man who is Lucy’s life is in bad shape when we meet him, because her life is in such disarray. Together they work to make her life a life worth living.
First off, I love this idea of someone being your life. I love that this person’s appearance and well-being is directly influenced by your decisions. It’s just such a cute idea and the story was such a fun tale with some really great lines. Seriously, this novel had some freaking fantastic lines, references and nicknames. One of my favorite bits is the following:
". . . there was a smile on his face as bright as my new bathroom lightbulb which, given, on first read is a lame and unromantic simile, but when plunged in darkness for a year while on the toilet, a new lightbulb is a very welcoming and enlightening thing to have, not to mention useful."
Bottom Line
Basically, if you are looking for a fun, lighthearted read that actually makes you pause for moment and consider your own choices in life then The Time of My Life is a book that you will really enjoy. I liked this book so much that I’m actually thinking I need a physical copy to grace my bookshelf. That’s some coveted space my friends. show less
After Tamara Goodwin's father finds himself unable to pay off all his debts and commits suicide, she and her mother are exiled to the countryside, to Tamara's aunt and uncle.
Gone is the pool and bath with a built in television. Gone are the posh Dublin friends and fancy foods; the shopping trips to London and weekends in Paris. Now Tamara finds herself living in a tiny village, in the gatehouse to an ancient castle, with her crazy aunt and her uncle who hardly ever speaks a word. And her show more mother who's still 'grieving'--but in a way that means that she never comes out of her room or speaks to anyone.
Tamara's going stir crazy when, one day not long after her arrival, Marcus, a local boy, shows up driving the traveling library. Tamara finds one book in the library that she decides and after finally prying open the lock on it, she finds diary entries. Entries written in her own handwriting. Dated the next day.
Tamara's at first skeptical, but with her life seemingly flying out of control--just what is going on with her mother, and why won't her aunt have her seen by a doctor?--and the journal turning out right that first day, Tamara decides to give listening a shot.
Maybe the book will give her some answers.
I've only read two of Cecelia Ahern's other books, PS I Love You and Rosie Dunne/Love, Rosie, and while I really liked those books, this one was loads better. The Book of Tomorrow had a lot more depth than Cecelia Ahern's other books that I've read. It was suspenseful and emotional--but without being Lifetime moviesque--and the characters, their relationships and the different dynamics were really well done and, quite frankly, rather unexpected, too.
This is all on top of a character that would not have been at all out of place in a Hitchcock or Stephen King tale. She was creepy, I'm telling you. As I've said I haven't read all of Ahern's writing so I don't know if any of them are in the same vein as Book of Tomorrow but I certainly hope that some of her future work is because, if so, readers are certainly in for a treat.
While Cecelia Ahern can do romance and sweet and cute, she can really do mystery with a hint of creepy & magic.
The main character in The Book of Tomorrow is a teenager, but Tomorrow is really an ageless book (if that's even a thing--if not, I am now making it one!). Readers of any age--those of Tamara's age up to those of Rosealeen's age and beyond--will easily enjoy this tale. There is mention (and I believe just mention/recollection more so than action) of teens doing things that good teens maybe wouldn't do, so some might not like it for younger teens there. But because nothing's explicit and everything really does have consequences, I really wouldn't even stop them from reading this.
10/10
(won a galley from the publisher) show less
Gone is the pool and bath with a built in television. Gone are the posh Dublin friends and fancy foods; the shopping trips to London and weekends in Paris. Now Tamara finds herself living in a tiny village, in the gatehouse to an ancient castle, with her crazy aunt and her uncle who hardly ever speaks a word. And her show more mother who's still 'grieving'--but in a way that means that she never comes out of her room or speaks to anyone.
Tamara's going stir crazy when, one day not long after her arrival, Marcus, a local boy, shows up driving the traveling library. Tamara finds one book in the library that she decides and after finally prying open the lock on it, she finds diary entries. Entries written in her own handwriting. Dated the next day.
Tamara's at first skeptical, but with her life seemingly flying out of control--just what is going on with her mother, and why won't her aunt have her seen by a doctor?--and the journal turning out right that first day, Tamara decides to give listening a shot.
Maybe the book will give her some answers.
I've only read two of Cecelia Ahern's other books, PS I Love You and Rosie Dunne/Love, Rosie, and while I really liked those books, this one was loads better. The Book of Tomorrow had a lot more depth than Cecelia Ahern's other books that I've read. It was suspenseful and emotional--but without being Lifetime moviesque--and the characters, their relationships and the different dynamics were really well done and, quite frankly, rather unexpected, too.
This is all on top of a character that would not have been at all out of place in a Hitchcock or Stephen King tale. She was creepy, I'm telling you. As I've said I haven't read all of Ahern's writing so I don't know if any of them are in the same vein as Book of Tomorrow but I certainly hope that some of her future work is because, if so, readers are certainly in for a treat.
While Cecelia Ahern can do romance and sweet and cute, she can really do mystery with a hint of creepy & magic.
The main character in The Book of Tomorrow is a teenager, but Tomorrow is really an ageless book (if that's even a thing--if not, I am now making it one!). Readers of any age--those of Tamara's age up to those of Rosealeen's age and beyond--will easily enjoy this tale. There is mention (and I believe just mention/recollection more so than action) of teens doing things that good teens maybe wouldn't do, so some might not like it for younger teens there. But because nothing's explicit and everything really does have consequences, I really wouldn't even stop them from reading this.
10/10
(won a galley from the publisher) show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 83
- Also by
- 8
- Members
- 23,955
- Popularity
- #875
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 863
- ISBNs
- 1,018
- Languages
- 29
- Favorited
- 67


































