The woodcutter and his family / Frank McGuinness.
Publication details: Dublin : Brandon, 2017.Description: 223 p. ; 22 cmISBN:- 9781847179074 : (hbk.)
- 823 23
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loanable Book | Library | Fiction | FIC MCG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Copy 1 | Available | 000412957 | |
Loanable Book | Library | Irish Collection | 823 MCG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Copy 2 | Available | 000412654 |
My son betrayed me. It is a family tradition. Didn't I do the same to my father? The World War intensifies in Europe. In Zurich a writer breathes his last imagining his life till now from his childhood in Dublin. The voices of his family circling him - wife, son, daughter - carry him to his end as he hears each separate chapter chronicling the power of their passion for their famous father, their love, their hate, their need, their sorrows and joys, their strangeness. And James Joyce has saved for them one last story to delight and defy them: The Woodcutter And His Children ...
Review: What an intricate and fascinating read The Woodcutter and His Family is. I found myself horrified, entertained, amused and sometimes bewildered as I read * Linda's Book Bag * It has the texture of a masterwork -- uncompromising, adroit, properly audacious, the offspring of a radiant curiosity. * Sebastian Barry * beautifully written, tender and psychologically-complex story of family life ... rather than focusing solely on Joyce's perspective, Frank McGuinness gives equal space in his novel to son Archie, wife Bertha and daughter Beatrice (named differently from Joyce's actual family) before plunging into James Joyce's point of view ... No doubt, a lot of Joyce fans will enjoy this personal and poetic take on the lives of James Joyce and his family members. In particular, in James' section it delves into his notoriously luke-warm personal interactions with Proust. Joyce hilariously refers to Proust's magnum opus as "Cooking for Phantoms." ... More than its depiction of the great writer, this is a novel which gracefully encompasses so much of what makes Irish literature mesmerising. "The Woodcutter and His Family" is suffused with a bewitchingly morbid sense of humour and voices which insist on being heard * lonesomereader.com *
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