Michael Cannon

Michael
Cannon

Michael Cannon had an unhappy schooling in the West of Scotland and left with a clutch of poor qualifications. He started a job as a trainee in the Tax Office in the civil service, a position that he found both boring and difficult. At the age of twenty-two Cannon started work at Sullom Voe oil terminal in the Shetlands, in a job that saw him doing no less than sixty seven hours a week. Although well paid, it was a shift system that saw him working twenty-eight days on and seven days off, but he realised that without further education he would never be able to progress. He decided to enrol at a further education college in order to gain the necessary qualifications to enter university. He then spent a summer working at a Kibbutz before returning to read English literature. After graduating he secured a post at Strathclyde University where his role predominately involved negotiating intellectual property contracts. Although he still works at Strathclyde University (as a “liaison between academia and industry”) he claims that his three published works were written after hours. The Borough was published in 1995 and A Conspiracy of Hope was in 1996, both by Serpents Tail. Cannon’s latest book, Lachlan’s War, was published in Autumn 2006 by Viking. His short stories have appeared in several anthologies of Scottish Short Fiction.
Michael Cannon had an unhappy schooling in the West of Scotland and left with a clutch of poor qualifications. He started a job as a trainee in the Tax Office in the civil service, a position that he found both boring and difficult. At the age of twenty-two Cannon started work at Sullom Voe oil terminal in the Shetlands, in a job that saw him doing no less than sixty seven hours a week. Although well paid, it was a shift system that saw him working twenty-eight days on and seven days off, but he realised that without further education he would never be able to progress. He decided to enrol at a further education college in order to gain the necessary qualifications to enter university. He then spent a summer working at a Kibbutz before returning to read English literature. After graduating he secured a post at Strathclyde University where his role predominately involved negotiating intellectual property contracts. Although he still works at Strathclyde University (as a “liaison between academia and industry”) he claims that his three published works were written after hours. The Borough was published in 1995 and A Conspiracy of Hope was in 1996, both by Serpents Tail. Cannon’s latest book, Lachlan’s War, was published in Autumn 2006 by Viking. His short stories have appeared in several anthologies of Scottish Short Fiction.
artwork-image

PREVIOUS NOMINATIONS

RELATED FEATURES

Video April 7 2026

The 2026 Shortlist

Discover this year's Dublin Literary Award Shortlist
News April 7 2026

2026 Dublin Literary Award Shortlist is Announced

Delve into the 6 novels shortlisted this year.
News April 2 2026

Past Winner Spotlight: Michael Crummey

Reflecting on his 2025 Dublin Literary Award win with his novel 'The Adversary', libraries, literature and more.
News March 11 2026

Translator Spotlight: Jo Heinrich

Reflecting on translating the 2023 winning novel 'Marzahn, Mon Amour' and life as a literary translator.

STAY CONNECTED

Stay in touch and sign up to our newsletter to receive all the latest news and updates on the Dublin Literary Award.