
Conversations Encore: Colm Toibin on his early life and running away to Barcelona, Brooklyn and beyond
May 5, 2026
Colm Toibin, Irish novelist and essayist behind Brooklyn and Long Island, reflects on leaving Ireland for Barcelona and beyond. He recalls childhood memory, Catholic upbringing, post‑Franco sexual freedom, travels from Sudan to LA, and how small details and family life surface in his fiction. The conversation traces origins, reinvention, and the curious moments that feed his novels.
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Barcelona After Franco Felt Like Freedom
- In 1976–77 Barcelona was a liberation after Franco: mass youthful marches, concerts and sexual freedom drew Toibin into hedonism.
- He enjoyed steady pay, his own flat, opera, and a pre-AIDS cruising scene.
Practical Limits Drove Return From Spain
- Toibin returned to Ireland because as a foreigner in Catalan family networks he foresaw long-term outsider status and limited career mobility.
- He worried English-language teaching offered little upward movement and recognized civic exclusions like voting.
Test Sentences Aloud To Spot Clunky Prose
- Do cut what you cannot say clearly in fiction and read sentences aloud to test clunkiness.
- Toibin learned early to “see over” clumsy prose with an editor who urged audible testing.


