A Frank O'Connor reader
著者
書誌事項
A Frank O'Connor reader
(Irish studies)
Syracuse University Press, 1994
Syracuse University Press ed
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 403-406)
収録内容
- Guests of the nation
- In the train
- The majesty of the law
- Michael's wife
- Orpheus and his lute
- What's wrong with the country
- Old fellows
- The holy door
- Darcy in Tír na nÓg
- The rebel
- The face of evil
- Lonely rock
- A minority
- The man of the world
- The genius
- Music when soft voices die
- The party
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Frank O'Connor (1903-1966) is known primarily for his short stories, and fine ones they are. There are seventeen of them in this Reader, and the best of them, in the words of Richard Ellmann "stir those facial muscles which, we are told, are the same for both laughing and weeping." Except for the masterpiece, "Guests of the Nation," the stories included here have been out of print for twenty years, and one story had been previously unpublished.
But this is a Reader and it celebrates the creative diversity of one of this century's finest writers. Here one can also sample O'Connor's skillful translations of Irish poetry, including "The Lament for Art O'Leary." There are a number of self-portraits, including "Meet Frank O'Connor" and "Writing a Story-One Man's Way."
The final section includes a number of O'Connor's finest essays, from pieces on Yeats, Joyce, and Mozart, to ones on English and Irish pubs and one simply titled, "Ireland": "No one who does not love the sense of the past should ever come near us; nobody who does, whatever our faults may be, should give us the hard word."
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