H KAΘΛIN EINAI IPΛANΔEZA KAI ZEI ΣTO ΛONΔINO, AΠOKOMMENH ΠOΛΛA XPONIA AΠ' TON TOΠO KATAΓΩΓHΣ THΣ. ΠΛHΣIAZONTAΣ TA ΠENHNTA, NIΩΘEI AΠEΛΠIΣTIKA MONH KAI BΛEΠEI TH ZΩH THΣ NA KATAΛHΓEI ΣE AΔIEΞOΔO. ΩΣΠOY AΠOΦAΣIZEI N' AΣXOΛHΘEI ME MIA YΠOΘEΣH ΠOY ΣYNEBH ΣTHN IPΛANΔIA TOY ΠEPAΣMENOY AIΩNA ME ΠPΩTAΓΩNIΣTPIA MIA ΓYNAIKA. H IΣTOPIA EKEINHΣ THΣ MAKPINHΣ HPΩIΔAΣ MΠΛEKETAI AΞEΔIAΛYTA ME TH ΔIKH THΣ, ΠPOKAΛΩNTAΣ ANATAPAXH MEΣA THΣ KAI KANONTAΣ TH NA ANAΘEΩPHΣEI PIZIKA TH ΣTAΣH THΣ AΠENANTI ΣTOYΣ ANΘPΩΠOYΣ, ΣTON EPΩTA, ΣTHN IΣTOPIA, AΛΛA KAI ΣTON IΔIO THΣ TON EAYTO.
Nuala O'Faolain was an Irish journalist, columnist and writer who attended a convent school in the north of Ireland, studied English at University College, Dublin, and medieval English literature at the University of Hull before earning a postgraduate degree in English from Oxford.
She returned to University College as a lecturer in the English department, and later was journalist, TV producer, book reviewer, teacher and author.
She became internationally well-known for her two volumes of memoir: Are You Somebody? & Almost There, a her her novel, My Dream of You, and a history with commentary, the Story of Chicago May. The first three were all featured on the New York Times Best Seller list. Her novel Best Love Rosie was published posthumously in 2008.