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The Granta Book Of The Irish Short Story

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Granta Book Of The Irish Short Story
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Anne Enright
SeriesGranta Anthologies
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:464
Dimensions(mm): Height 198,Width 130
Category/GenreAnthologies
Modern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
Short stories
ISBN/Barcode 9781847082558
ClassificationsDewey:823.01089415
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Granta Books
Imprint Granta Books
Publication Date 3 November 2011
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Lyrical, dark, comic or iconoclastic, the Irish short story has always punched well above its weight. Anne Enright has brought together a dazzling collection of Irish stories by authors born in the twentieth century - from Mary Lavin and Frank O'Connor to Claire Keegan and Kevin Barry. With a pithy and passionate introduction by Enright, The Granta Book of the Irish Short Story traces this great tradition through decades of social change and shows the pleasure Irish writers continue to take in the short-story form. Deft and often devastating, the short story dodges the rolling mythologies of of Irish life to produce truths that are delightful and real. Stories by: Maeve Brennan, Roddy Doyle, Mary Lavin, Colum McCann, William Trevor, John McGahern, Colm Toibin, Claire Keegan and Kevin Barry.

Author Biography

Anne Enright has published essays, short stories, a non-fiction book about motherhood and four novels including The Gathering, winner of the 2007 Man Booker Prize. She lives in Dublin.

Reviews

Enright has assembled a collection notable for its emotional range, its openness to many voices (not all lonely) and its willingness to reflect current realities. There is no conclusive formula linking such disparate narratives, no slick exploitation of Irishness, but rather a rich interplay of themes that capture a world in transition -- Declan Kiberd * Irish Times * A rich and absorbing volume, an evocation of life in Ireland which, at its finest, produces brilliantly skewering fragments written to pierce as well as gleam ... Enright's choice is a shrewd one, succeeding in typifying each writer whilst expressing their uniqueness -- Tom Adair * Scotland on Sunday * A book that intoxicates you with the sheer scope and potency of the short story form -- Daragh Reddin * Metro * The Granta Book of the Irish Short Story is more cherishable than canonical, and refreshingly contemporary in its selection of writers and writerly concerns -- Keith Hopper * Times Literary Supplement * [Anne Enright's] witty, brilliant introduction is one of the jewels in this selection ... When making her choices she concentrated on the art rather than the Irishness, and the result is sometimes wonderfully unexpected - here are William Trevor, Colm Toibin, Roddy Doyle, Clare Boylan and all the other geniuses, but not as you think you know them. Unmissable -- Kate Saunders * The Times * In an elegant and considered introduction to this collection, [Enright] explains that these short stories are simply ones she enjoys. However, the 31 inclusions cannot but say something about Ireland ... 'A Priest in the Family' by Colm Toibin is superb ... Edna O'Brien offers another fresh take on the sexuality of the clergy ... The further positives of The Granta Book of the Irish Short Story are too many to mention ... In this collection you encounter loners, outsiders and deeper versions of people you know; and eventually, one will say something just to you, and the mystery of the Irish short story comes as close as it can to being understood -- Eithne Shortall * Sunday Times Ireland * We may not be very good at economics or honest politics, but we certainly know how to write a short story. The excellent Granta Book of the Irish Short Story, edited by Anne Enright, is a must-read. * Irish Times * Full of tales that combine lyricism, humour and tragedy by the likes of William Trevor as well as relative newcomers such as Claire Keegan and Philip O Ceallaigh, it is shot through with an enduring sense of place but at the same time marks the enormous social changes Ireland has undergone in the past century -- Giles Foden * Conde Nast Traveller * This collection makes a bewitching bedside companion, amply illustrating that the Irish short story is very much alive and kicking -- Emma Hagestadt * Lady * The collection shines with personality, studiously avoiding what the editor describes as "charm", or "God save the mark", Irish charm * Independent * From Roddy Doyle to Elizabeth Bowen, and William Trevor to Edna O'Brien, a wealth of authors are contained within this excellent collection of modern Irish short fiction * Metro * An eclectic mix of intriguing short stories ... each story leaves you hungry for the next one -- Siobhan White * Big Issue in the North * This collection attempts to define the essential Irish aspects of the stories chosen ... the best pieces here serve as a prompt to find or rediscover the writers' other works -- Isobel Montgomery * Guardian * An] excellent miscellany of modern short fiction from Ireland ... Throughout, the prose is economical, in the sense of being deft, not sparse ... The prevailing mode is an everyday realism of carefully observed gestures and lifelike dialogue, well adapted to the mental turmoil of lustful, lovelorn protagonists ... Wisely, the stories are arranged imaginatively, not chronologically - think mix tape, not reference work - so, unlike many anthologies, this is a book you actually want to sit down with and read -- Anthony Cummins * Observer * Over 400 pages of amazing writing -- Judi Curtin * Irish Daily Mail * A dazzling collection * Guardian *