Culture
Tracy Fahey wins 2025 Rubery International Book Award
Tracy Fahey the winner of 2025 Rubery International Book Award. Photography by Suzanne Thompson, Circus Photography
Limerick Author, Tracy Fahey wins 2025 Rubery International Book Award for female body horror collection, ‘I Spit Myself Out’

Limerick School of Art and Design lecturer, Tracy Fahey has been awarded prestigious 2025 Rubery International Book Award for her body-horror described as “a superb collection of literary horror… a beautifully crafted collection.”
She wins the award for her collection ‘I Spit Myself Out’. Described by the London Review of Books as ‘independent publishing’s response to the Booktrust and the Orange Prize,’ the Rubery International Book Award is one of the UK’s most respected literary prizes for independent and small-press authors.
I Spit Myself Out, first published in 2021 by Bristol-based Sinister Horror Company, and shortlisted for a British Fantasy Award in 2022, offers eighteen unsettling stories that map the female experience from puberty to menopause. In this collection, an Anatomical Venus opens to display her organs, in a mysterious clinic, clients disappear one by one, a police investigation reveals family secrets, revenge is inked in the skin, and bodies pulsate in the throes of illness, childbirth and religious ritual. The opening story, ‘I’ll Be Your Mirror,’ has been reprinted in the British Library’s Doomed Romances anthology, and five of its stories made US editor Ellen Datlow’s list of Recommended Reading for 2022.
This award adds to Fahey’s growing list of accolades. Described by Lol Tolhurst of the Cure as ‘a modern-day gothic whose Kafkaesque otherworldly stories are beautifully disturbing,’ she won the Paul Cave Prize For Literature in 2024, a Finnish Saari Fellowship in 2023, and has been shortlisted three times for British Fantasy Awards, most recently in 2024 for PS Publishing’s Absinthe novella They Shut Me Up. However, for Fahey, this newest win is bittersweet. I Spit Myself Out went out of print in 2023 due to the closure of the original press, just two years after its publication, and she is actively seeking a new publishing home to bring it back into circulation. Only a very limited number of first editions remain on sale, locally available at Banner Books in Ennistymon and Kilrush.
For Fahey, this book is arguably more relevant than ever. ‘I Spit Myself Out is part of a wave of contemporary body-horror typified by Mona Awad, Carmen Maria Machado, and Aliya Whiteley. In I Spit Myself Out, the themes of identity, aging, bodily autonomy, and coercive control, remain culturally urgent. I’m confident that a new edition of I Spit Myself Out would resonate with readers of contemporary horror, feminist writing, and literary short fiction alike.’ She is excited to have the additional validation of the Rubery International Book Award. ‘Winning the Rubery Award proves there’s appetite for narratives that centre the female body as a site of resistance against patriarchal, societal and political oppression. In this era that refracts current female concerns through the lens of horror—like 2024 movies Coralie Fargeat’s The Substance and Marielle Heller’s Nightbitch—it’s time to bring this book back into the world.’
In fact, her next project, Queens of the Crone Age, centres again on the female figure and will include her Paul Cave-prize-winning novella, What Happens At The End. UK publishers PS Publishing say ‘We are delighted to publish Fahey’s next upcoming project, scheduled for 2026 – a linked short story collection exploring the resurrection of the powerful, mythological figure of the Hag in the contemporary world—and what this resurrection provokes.’
The Rubery International Book Award, established in 2010, celebrates exceptional works of fiction and non-fiction. It recognizes excellence and originality across genres—and this year affirmed Fahey’s distinctive literary horror voice.





