Richard O'Rawe is an Irish author and former Irish republican activist from Belfast, best known for his 2005 memoir Blanketmen: An Untold Story of the H-Block Hunger Strike, in which he claimed that the Provisional Irish Republican Army leadership rejected a British settlement offer that could have ended the 1981 Irish hunger strike before six further prisoners died. A former Provisional IRA volunteer, O'Rawe served as press officer for the prisoners in Long Kesh during the hunger strikes and was among the original blanket men. His allegations, which implicated Gerry Adams and other senior republicans in a decision shaped by electoral calculation rather than the welfare of the hunger strikers, provoked lasting controversy within the republican movement. He has since written a biography of Gerry Conlon of the Guildford Four, a study of British agent Freddie Scappaticci, and a debut novel, Northern Heist (2018), loosely based on the Northern Bank robbery of 2004.