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Key features of this text: How to study the text Author and
historical background General and detailed summaries Commentary on
themes, structure, characters, language and style Glossaries Test
questions and issues to consider Essay writing advice Cultural
connections Literary terms Illustrations Colour design
From its origins in the folk tale, through its evolution in response to changing social and political conditions to its current form, the Irish short story has retained its own distinct and unique form. The finest writers of their time are represented here by their best work, showing the variety of style and approach within the genre. From George Moore's masterpiece, `Homesickness', and the warmth and humour of James Stephens, to the romantic eloquence of Bryan MacMahon, these stories capture the Irish people, their way of life, mythology and history.
The story of the title deals with a little boy named Larry and his
feelings towards his father. When his father returns home from
World War II, Larry is resentful and jealous of losing his mother's
undivided attention, and finds himself in a constant struggle to
win back her affections.
Not Quite Poetry is a book of prose, structured poetry and essays
describing quantum science, random thoughts on life, friendships
and art. Lastly, the words reflect upon a life without the facility
of speech taken for granted by most of us.
Sinisteria Begins describes in detail the slow development, over
the course of several years, of a large and complex sculptural
installation located on the grounds of the Charles E. Burchfield
Nature and Art Center in West Seneca, New York. Comprised of
hundreds of dead, painted tree branches, the work covers and
engulfs a hollow, fourteen-foot-tall metal sculpture. This unique
and inviting artificial environment exists in harmony with its
natural surroundings, while at the same time referencing invasive
species, emotional trauma and even string theory.
The story of Frank O'Connor is that of a shy child from a Cork slum
who becomes aware that there is something beyond the confines of
his life and the lives around him, something grander. And with
resolve and labor, he makes his way toward it. From his childhood
to the time of his release from imprisonment as a revolutionary,
O'Connor conveys the moral fortune and the tragic elements of life,
that sparked his storytelling - a life he describes as a
"celebration of those who for me represented all I should ever know
of God".
Award-winning edition of this outstanding translation of Brian
Merriman's eighteenth-century erotic masterpiece. Translated by
Frank O'Connor Illustrations by Brian Bourke.
The contents have been intriguingly divided into eight narrative
threads that influenced and informed O'Connor's oeuvre. War
includes the famous 'Guests of the Nation', set during the Irish
War of Independence; Childhood draws on autobiographical writings
to present a revealing picture of the author as a boy, the only
child of an alcoholic father and doting mother; Writers bears
witness to his literary debt to Yeats and Joyce. The stories in
Lonely Voices movingly demonstrate O'Connor's theory that in this
genre can be achieved 'something we do not often find in the novel
- an intense awareness of human loneliness'; yet they are
counterparted by his wonderfully polyphonic tales of family,
friendship and rivalry in Better Quarrelling. In Ireland come
poems, stories and articles inspired by the native land he loved
but never sentimentalized, while from Abroad the writer in exile
discourses upon universally relevant themes of emigration,
hardship, absence and return. Finally, Last Things contains
O'Connor's thoughts on religion, the church, the soul and its
destiny, but remains above all a celebration of humanity 'who for
me represented all I should ever know of God'.
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