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Long Island (Paperback): Colm Toibin Long Island (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R385 R301 Discovery Miles 3 010 Save R84 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

From the beloved, critically acclaimed New York Times bestselling author comes a spectacularly moving and intense novel of secrecy, misunderstanding, and love, the story of Eilis Lacey, the complex and enigmatic heroine of Brooklyn, Tóibín’s most popular work in twenty years.

Eilis Lacey is Irish, married to Tony Fiorello, a plumber and one of four Italian American brothers, all of whom live in neighboring houses on a cul-de-sac in Lindenhurst, Long Island, with their wives and children and Tony’s parents, a huge extended family that lives and works, eats and plays together. It is the spring of 1976 and Eilis, now in her forties with two teenage children, has no one to rely on in this still-new country. Though her ties to Ireland remain stronger than those that hold her to her new land and home, she has not returned in decades.

One day, when Tony is at his job and Eilis is in her home office doing her accounting, an Irishman comes to the door asking for her by name. He tells her that his wife is pregnant with Tony’s child and that when the baby is born, he will not raise it but instead deposit it on Eilis’s doorstep. It is what Eilis does—and what she refuses to do—in response to this stunning news that makes Tóibín’s novel so riveting.

Long Island is about longings unfulfilled, even unrecognized. The silences in Eilis’s life are thunderous and dangerous, and there’s no one more deft than Tóibín at giving them language. This is a gorgeous story of a woman alone in a marriage and the deepest bonds she rekindles on her return to the place and people she left behind, to ways of living and loving she thought she’d lost.

Brooklyn (Paperback): Colm Toibin Brooklyn (Paperback)
Colm Toibin 1
bundle available
R275 R230 Discovery Miles 2 300 Save R45 (16%) Ships in 12 - 17 working days

It is Ireland in the early 1950s and for Eilis Lacey, as for so many young Irish girls, opportunities are scarce. So when her sister arranges for her to emigrate to New York, Eilis knows she must go, leaving behind her family and her home for the first time. Arriving in a crowded lodging house in Brooklyn, Eilis can only be reminded of what she has sacrificed. She is far from home - and homesick. And just as she takes tentative steps towards friendship, and perhaps something more, Eilis receives news which sends her back to Ireland. There she will be confronted by a terrible dilemma - a devastating choice between duty and one great love.

A Guest at the Feast - Essays: Colm Toibin A Guest at the Feast - Essays
Colm Toibin
R439 R367 Discovery Miles 3 670 Save R72 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
New Ways to Kill Your Mother - Writers and Their Families (Paperback): Colm Toibin New Ways to Kill Your Mother - Writers and Their Families (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
R480 R405 Discovery Miles 4 050 Save R75 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Novelist and critic Colm Toibin explores the relationships of writers with their families and their work in the brilliant, nuanced, and wholly original "New Ways to Kill Your Mother."
Toibin--celebrated both for his award-winning fiction and his provocative book reviews and essays--traces the intriguing, often twisted family ties of writers in the books they leave behind.
Through the relationship between W. B. Yeats and his father, Thomas Mann and his children, Jane Austen and her aunts, and Tennessee Williams and his sister, Toibin examines a world of relations, richly comic or savage in their implications. Acutely perceptive and imbued with rare tenderness and wit, "New Ways to Kill Your Mother "is a fascinating look at writers' most influential bonds and a secret key to understanding and enjoying their work.

A Guest at the Feast - Essays (Hardcover): Colm Toibin A Guest at the Feast - Essays (Hardcover)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R693 R581 Discovery Miles 5 810 Save R112 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The South (Paperback, Original ed.): Colm Toibin The South (Paperback, Original ed.)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R390 R326 Discovery Miles 3 260 Save R64 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In 1950, Katherine Proctor leaves Ireland for Barcelona, determined to escape her family and become a painter. There she meets Miguel, an anarchist veteran of the Spanish Civil War, and begins to build a life with him. But Katherine cannot escape her past, as Michael Graves, a fellow Irish emigre in Spain, forces her to reexamine all her relationships: to her lover, her art, and the homeland she only thought she knew.
The South is a novel of classic themes--of art and exile, and of the seemingly irreconcilable yearnings for love and freedom--to which Colm Toibin brings a new, passionate sensitivity.

The Blackwater Lightship (Paperback): Colm Toibin The Blackwater Lightship (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R275 R215 Discovery Miles 2 150 Save R60 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

Helen’s beloved brother Declan is dying. Now, she must join her mother and grandmother in a crumbling old house by the sea, three generations calling an uneasy truce after years of strife, to be by his side.

Together with Declan’s friends, who know more about him than any family, they must all deal with the past and come to terms with each other.

The Magician (Paperback): Colm Toibin The Magician (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R529 R417 Discovery Miles 4 170 Save R112 (21%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
The Story Of the Night (Paperback): Colm Toibin The Story Of the Night (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R275 R215 Discovery Miles 2 150 Save R60 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

Richard Garay lives alone with his mother in Buenos Aires, hiding his sexuality from her and the world. Stifled by a job he despises, he finds himself willing to take considerable risks.

Set in Argentina in a time of great change, The Story of the Night by Colm Tóibín is a powerful and moving novel about sex, death, and a man who, as the Falklands War is fought and lost, finds his own way to emerge into the world.

The Heather Blazing (Paperback): Colm Toibin The Heather Blazing (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R275 R215 Discovery Miles 2 150 Save R60 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

Colm Tóibín’s The Heather Blazing details the life of Eamon Redmond, a judge in Ireland’s high court, a man remote from his wife, his son and daughter and, at least outwardly, from his own childhood.

The life he has built for himself, between his work in Dublin and his family’s retreat by the sea at Cush, is distinguished by order and by achievement.

When, like his beloved coastline, it begins to slip away, he is pulled sharply into the present, and finds himself revisiting his past.

All a Novelist Needs - Colm Toibin on Henry James (Paperback): Colm Toibin All a Novelist Needs - Colm Toibin on Henry James (Paperback)
Colm Toibin; Edited by Susan M. Griffin
R706 Discovery Miles 7 060 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book collects, for the first time, Colm Toibin's critical essays on Henry James. Shortlisted for the Booker Prize for his novel about James's life, "The Master," Toibin brilliantly analyzes James from a novelist's point of view.

Known for his acuity and originality, Toibin is himself a master of fiction and critical works, which makes this collection of his writings on Henry James essential reading for literary critics. But he also writes for general readers. Until now, these writings have been scattered in introductions, essays in the "Dublin Times," reviews in the "New York Review of Books," and other disparate venues.

With humor and verve, Toibin approaches Henry James's life and work in many and various ways. He reveals a novelist haunted by George Eliot and shows how thoroughly James was a New Yorker. He demonstrates how a new edition of Henry James's letters along with a biography of James's sister-in-law alter and enlarge our understanding of the master. His "Afterword" is a fictional meditation on the written and the unwritten.

Toibin's remarkable insights provide scholars, students, and general readers a fresh encounter with James's well-known texts.

The South (Paperback): Colm Toibin The South (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R275 R215 Discovery Miles 2 150 Save R60 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

A modern classic work of Irish literature, this award-winning novel is an exploration of love, art and identity.

Katherine Proctor has dared to leave her family in Ireland and reach out for a new life. Determined to become an artist, she flees to Spain, where she meets Miguel, a passionate man who has fought for his own freedoms. They retreat to the quiet intensity of the mountains and begin to build a life together. But as Miguel’s past catches up with him, Katherine too is forced to re-examine her relationships: with her lover, her painting and the homeland she only thought she knew. . .

The South is the book that introduced readers to the astonishing gifts of Colm Tóibín, winning the Irish Times First Fiction Award in 1991.

The Master (Paperback): Colm Toibin The Master (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R239 Discovery Miles 2 390 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In January 1895 Henry James anticipates the opening of his first play, Guy Domville, in London. The production fails, and he returns, chastened and humiliated, to his writing desk. The result is a string of masterpieces, but they are produced at a high personal cost.

In The Master Colm Tóibín captures the exquisite anguish of a man who circulated in the grand parlours and palazzos of Europe, who was astonishingly vibrant and alive in his art, and yet whose attempts at intimacy inevitably failed him and those he tried to love.

It is a powerful account of the hazards of putting the life of the mind before affairs of the heart.

Mothers And Sons (Paperback): Colm Toibin Mothers And Sons (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R236 Discovery Miles 2 360 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

A stunning collection of nine stories that teases out the delicate and difficult strands woven between mothers and sons.

Mothers and Sons is a sensitive meditation on the dramas surrounding this most elemental of relationships. Psychologically intricate and emotionally incisive, each story focuses on a moment in which an unspoken balance shifts; in which a mother or son do battle, or experience a sudden crisis, thus leaving their conception of who they are subtly or seriously altered.

This is an acute, masterful and moving collection that confirms Colm Tóibín as a great prose stylist of our time.

Brooklyn (Paperback): Colm Toibin Brooklyn (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R438 R335 Discovery Miles 3 350 Save R103 (24%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
A Guest at the Feast (Hardcover): Colm Toibin A Guest at the Feast (Hardcover)
Colm Toibin
R235 R156 Discovery Miles 1 560 Save R79 (34%) Ships in 10 - 20 working days

A Guest at the Feast uncovers the places where politics and poetics meet, where life and fiction overlap, where one can be inside writing and also outside of it. From the melancholy and amusement within the work of the writer John McGahern to an extraordinary essay on his own cancer diagnosis, Toibin delineates the bleakness and strangeness of life and also its richness and its complexity. As he reveals the shades of light and dark in a Venice without tourists and the streets of Buenos Aires riddled with disappearances, we find ourselves considering law and religion in Ireland as well as the intricacies of Marilynne Robinson's fiction. The imprint of the written word on the private self, as Toibin himself remarks, is extraordinarily powerful. In this collection, that power is gloriously alive, illuminating history and literature, politics and power, family and the self. 'Toibin's voice is so powerful and distinct, his descriptions so precise, that a single thread does weave through each of these pieces and does not snap . . . perhaps Ireland's greatest living male writer' Sunday Times 'An unsurprisingly erudite, gracefully written unpicking of the world' Independent

The Hour of the Star - 100th Anniversary Edition (Hardcover): Clarice Lispector The Hour of the Star - 100th Anniversary Edition (Hardcover)
Clarice Lispector; Translated by Benjamin Moser; Afterword by Paulo Gurgel Valente; Introduction by Colm Toibin
bundle available
R482 R390 Discovery Miles 3 900 Save R92 (19%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

The Hour of the Star, Clarice Lispector's consummate final novel, may well be her masterpiece. Narrated by the cosmopolitan Rodrigo S.M., this brief, strange, and haunting tale is the story of Macabea, one of life's unfortunates. Living in the slums of Rio and eking out a poor living as a typist, Macabea loves movies, Coca-Cola, and her rat of a boyfriend; she would like to be like Marilyn Monroe, but she is ugly, underfed, sickly, and unloved. Rodrigo recoils from her wretchedness, and yet he cannot avoid the realization that for all her outward misery, Macabea is inwardly free. She doesn't seem to know how unhappy she should be. As Macabea heads toward her absurd death, Lispector employs her pathetic heroine against her urbane, empty narrator-edge of despair to edge of despair-and, working them like a pair of scissors, she cuts away the reader's preconceived notions about poverty, identity, love, and the art of fiction. In her last book she takes readers close to the true mystery of life and leaves us deep in Lispector territory indeed.

The Testament of Mary (Paperback): Colm Toibin The Testament of Mary (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R326 R268 Discovery Miles 2 680 Save R58 (18%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

In the ancient town of Ephesus, Mary lives alone, years after her son's crucifixion. She has no interest in collaborating with the authors of the Gospel, who are her keepers. She does not agree that her son is the Son of God; nor that his death was "worth it"; nor that the "group of misfits he gathered around him, men who could not look a woman in the eye," were holy disciples.
Mary judges herself ruthlessly (she did not stay at the foot of the cross until her son died--she fled, to save herself), and her judgment of others is equally harsh. This woman whom we know from centuries of paintings and scripture as the docile, loving, silent, long-suffering, obedient, worshipful mother of Christ becomes a tragic heroine with the relentless eloquence of Electra or Medea or Antigone. Toibin's tour de force of imagination and language is a portrait so vivid and convincing that our image of Mary will be forever transformed.

Homage to Barcelona (Paperback, Rev. and Updated Ed): Colm Toibin Homage to Barcelona (Paperback, Rev. and Updated Ed)
Colm Toibin
R275 R215 Discovery Miles 2 150 Save R60 (22%) Ships in 5 - 10 working days

This title is a personal and carefully research account of Barcelona, from its founding to its huge growth in the 19th century. The author covers the city's: history; art and architecture; great churches and museums; cafes; port life; restaurants and fashionable nightclubs.

Another Country (Paperback, [New Ed.]): James Baldwin Another Country (Paperback, [New Ed.])
James Baldwin; Introduction by Colm Toibin
bundle available
R306 R251 Discovery Miles 2 510 Save R55 (18%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Published in 1962, this is an emotionally intense novel of love, hatred, race and liberal America in the 1960s. Set in Greenwhich Village, Harlem and France, Another Country tells the story of the suicide of jazz-musician Rufus Scott and the friends who search for an understanding of his life and death, discovering uncomfortable truths about themselves along the way.

Brooklyn (Paperback): Colm Toibin Brooklyn (Paperback)
Colm Toibin 1
bundle available
R296 R240 Discovery Miles 2 400 Save R56 (19%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Colm Toibin's Brooklyn is a devastating story of love, loss and one woman's terrible choice between duty and personal freedom. The book that inspired the major motion picture starring Saoirse Ronan. It is Ireland in the early 1950s and for Eilis Lacey, as for so many young Irish girls, opportunities are scarce. So when her sister arranges for her to emigrate to New York, Eilis knows she must go, leaving behind her family and her home for the first time. Arriving in a crowded lodging house in Brooklyn, Eilis can only be reminded of what she has sacrificed. She is far from home - and homesick. And just as she takes tentative steps towards friendship, and perhaps something more, Eilis receives news which sends her back to Ireland. There she will be confronted by a terrible dilemma - a devastating choice between duty and one great love. *** 'With this elating and humane novel, Colm Toibin has produced a masterwork' Sunday Times 'Unforgettable' Spectator 'The most compelling and moving portrait of a young woman I have read in a long time' Zoe Heller Guardian, Books of the Year 'Magnificent' Sunday Telegraph 'A work of such skill, understatement and sly jewelled merriment could haunt your life' Ali Smith TLS, Books of the Year When you are finished why not read the companion novel Nora Webster.

House of Names (Paperback): Colm Toibin House of Names (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
bundle available
R429 R356 Discovery Miles 3 560 Save R73 (17%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Blackwater Lightship (Paperback, 1st Scribner Paperback Fiction ed): Toibin Blackwater Lightship (Paperback, 1st Scribner Paperback Fiction ed)
Toibin
bundle available
R421 R323 Discovery Miles 3 230 Save R98 (23%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

It is Ireland in the early 1990s. Helen, her mother, Lily, and her grandmother, Dora have come together to tend to Helen's brother, Declan, who is dying of AIDS. With Declan's two friends, the six of them are forced to plumb the shoals of their own histories and to come to terms with each other.

Shortlisted for the Booker Prize, The Blackwater Lightship is a deeply resonant story about three generations of an estranged family reuniting to mourn an untimely death. In spare, luminous prose, Colm Tóibín explores the nature of love and the complex emotions inside a family at war with itself. Hailed as "a genuine work of art" (Chicago Tribune), this is a novel about the capacity of stories to heal the deepest wounds.

Vinegar Hill (Paperback): Colm Toibin Vinegar Hill (Paperback)
Colm Toibin
R381 R308 Discovery Miles 3 080 Save R73 (19%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

Winner of the David Cohen Prize for Literature 2021. From the highly acclaimed author of Brooklyn, Colm Toibin's first collection of poetry explores sexuality, religion and belonging through a modern lens. Fans of Colm Toibin's novels, including The Magician, The Master and Nora Webster, will relish the opportunity to re-encounter Toibin in verse. Vinegar Hill explores the liminal space between private experiences and public events as Toibin examines a wide range of subjects - politics, queer love, reflections on literary and artistic greats, living through COVID, memory and a fading past, and facing mortality. The poems reflect a life well-travelled and well-lived; from growing up in the town of Enniscorthy, wandering the streets of Dublin and Barcelona, and crossing the bridges of Venice to visiting the White House, readers will travel through familiar locations and new destinations through Toibin's unique lens. Within this rich collection of poems written over the course of several decades, shot through with keen observation, emotion and humour, Toibin offers us lines and verses to provoke, ponder and cherish.

All a Novelist Needs - Colm Toibin on Henry James (Hardcover): Colm Toibin All a Novelist Needs - Colm Toibin on Henry James (Hardcover)
Colm Toibin; Edited by Susan M. Griffin
R1,318 Discovery Miles 13 180 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

This book collects, for the first time, Colm Toibin's critical essays on Henry James. Shortlisted for the Booker Prize for his novel about James's life, "The Master," Toibin brilliantly analyzes James from a novelist's point of view.

Known for his acuity and originality, Toibin is himself a master of fiction and critical works, which makes this collection of his writings on Henry James essential reading for literary critics. But he also writes for general readers. Until now, these writings have been scattered in introductions, essays in the "Dublin Times," reviews in the "New York Review of Books," and other disparate venues.

With humor and verve, Toibin approaches Henry James's life and work in many and various ways. He reveals a novelist haunted by George Eliot and shows how thoroughly James was a New Yorker. He demonstrates how a new edition of Henry James's letters along with a biography of James's sister-in-law alter and enlarge our understanding of the master. His "Afterword" is a fictional meditation on the written and the unwritten.

Toibin's remarkable insights provide scholars, students, and general readers a fresh encounter with James's well-known texts.

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