
Working creatively with children, Ann Marie is constantly inspired by the freedom of their imaginations and the worlds they conjure with ease. This deep respect for her young audience led her to write and illustrate a middle-grade series, designed to fully capture the attention of the readers she most admires.
Inspired by her very talkative cat, Seán, and family trips to London, Ann Marie wrote, illustrated, and recently published the second book in the series, Trapped at the Science Museum.
In non-fiction, Ann Marie has written for national newspapers in Ireland and the UK and has appeared on national television and radio discussing her work. However, her heart lies firmly with tall tales filled with fun, joy, and just a hint of chaos.

Elayne is especially focused on early childhood audiences -her books are designed to spark curiosity, build early science awareness, and support emotional understanding alongside factual learning. Elayne’s book ‘Sally Sunshine and the Terrible Tantrum‘ won the Junior Children’s CAP Award 2025. The series currently includes five gorgeous titles, with a sixth book in development

A personal quest for solace in the finest cancer writing morphed into the concept for her first book, The Breath of Consolation: Finding Solace in Cancer Literature. Encompassing novels, memoirs, poetry, short stories, and more, Josephine introduces works that are empowering, empathetic and consoling. Truly, medicine for the soul for all readers suffering because of cancer.
Winning Best Non-Fiction Book 2025 at the CAP Awards 2025 was an honour and a privilege. She is forever grateful to CAP for expanding awareness of her work among readers nationwide. Heartened by the recognition of the CAP judges, Josephine has begun work on her next work.

Novel Category. Judges Monica Corish and Tom Sigafoos.

Monica Corish came to writing via the scenic, roundabout route. After studying science, she trained as a nurse, received an MA in International Development Studies, and travelled and worked widely in Europe and Africa.
Her short fiction has won the University of Kent Fiction Prize and a Myslexia Flash Challenge. She has been shortlisted for the Hennessy Emerging Fiction Prize, the Merriman and Michael McLaverty Story Awards, and the Fish Flash Fiction Prize. Her stories have been published in The Stinging Fly, The Hennessy Book of Irish Fiction 2005-2015, Myslexia, SaveAsWriters.co.uk, www.substack.com/@thrutopia, The Ekphrastic Review, The Irish Independent, and The Irish Times.
Monica’s poetry has been published widely in Ireland and the UK.
Creative nonfiction and short stories by Irish-American author Tom Sigafoos have appeared in The Quiet Quarter Anthology: Ten Years of Great Irish Writing and many literary journals. His novel Pool of Darkness: Raymond Chandler in Ireland was shortlisted for the 2025 CAP Fiction Prize, and an early version of Pool was shortlisted for the Penny Dreadful Novella Prize. His radio memoir An American Scrapbook is posted on SoundCloud.
A member of WORD, the Irish Writers’ Centre and the Irish Writers’ Union, Tom has served as Chair and PRO of the Allingham Arts Association.
Monica and Tom live in north-west Ireland.
