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A collection of twelve mint fresh stories from the award winning
Irish author, described by Neil Jordan as 'the real thing - a
writer of great originality, dramatic flair, linguistic invention -
who remakes the world every time he puts pen to paper.' These tales
lead the reader around the fringes of Irish society through the
eyes of the marginalized.
Kant writes at one point in the Critique of Pure Reason that
practical freedom can be recognized "through experience, as one of
the natural causes" (B 831). This claim appears to conflict with a
central epistemological theme of his critical philosophy. This work
responds by carefully tracing the details of the relationship
between transcendental and practical freedom through all of Kant's
writings (published works, lecture notes, etc.). Kant uses the term
"practical freedom" in several quite different senses and draws on
pre-critical theses to varying degrees. While the problematic text
has long been noted, there has been no detailed study of its
importance.
Desmond Hogan is one of the most exciting literary talents to have
come out of Ireland in the past half-century. "Larks' Eggs"
reaffirms his stature, displaying anew a compressed lyricism,
ferocity and sheer prismatic brilliance in these twenty stories
from previous collections and twelve fresh ones. Cressida Connolly
called 'Airedale', in William Trevor's "The Oxford Book of Short
Stories", 'profound, moving and exquisitely executed. Hogan is one
of the finest writers alive today and deserves to be much better
known.' Joyce Carol Oates describes 'Winter Swimmers', in the Times
Literary Supplement, as an 'elegiac, daringly sustained prose
poem...a collage of meticulously rendered Irish scenes that weaves
in and out of tales of tinkers and youths'. Hogan's compelling
tales of diaspora and exile, of subsumed identity and allurement,
merge landscape with mindscape. His history-burdened, fragmented
personas are distinctly Irish, while exhilaratingly, wholly
universal. 'Here's to the storytellers. They made sense of these
lonely and driven lives of ours.' The Lilliput Press is proud to
introduce Desmond Hogan to a twenty-first century readership.
These eleven stories by Desmond Hogan, his first publication since
Larks' Eggs: New and Selected Stories (2005), collect newly minted
shards of experience focused on the lives of the dreamers and
marginalized who populate his imagined worlds. They range in time
and place from France, Germany and Italy in the nineteenth century
to Ireland of the 1950s and the present day. Their concerns are
fragility and identity expressed through the outer semblances of
dress and deportment, and inner realities of involuntary memory and
the retrieval of shared pasts. Close observation of nature combines
with psychological unveilings, much of it in the form of erotic
reverie. This bricolage of melded history and a fragmented
modernism renders truth-to-experience like no other contemporary
voice.
One of Ireland's most important writers at his finest. Written over
a period of twelve years, these stories seem to move nowehere with
relentless, slow precision, yet each is as fulfilling and rich with
suggestion as a full-scale novel.
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