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Colm Tóibín: The Heather Blazing

Jacket design: Jeff Fisher He stayed awake for a while trying to think about what was going to happen, but he could think of nothing except the empty house at home, everything still and untouched in the darkness, all of the rooms quiet, the fire gone out, the milk he collected in the morning, which now seemed so far away, slowly going rancid in the night. He imagined each room, each piece of furniture until slowly he, too, fell asleep. I got this edition of The Heather Blazing with its beautifully designed cover from my wife for Christmas. I've been wanting to read more novels by Colm Tóibín , especially after reading - and enjoying - Brooklyn so much. The Heather Blazing is Tóibín's second novel and set in his home country, Ireland. The main character is Eamon Redmond, a judge in the Irish High Court. As Eamon spends his days preparing for complicated court cases in a small village on the Irish shore, he begins to remember his childhood and the death of his father. ...

Blogistanian Globalia

Karoliinan innoittamana osallistun minäkin Blogistanian Globalian äänestykseen. Tässä siis ne vuonna 2011 Suomessa ilmestynyttä käännettyä kaunokirjallista teosta, jotka mielestäni ansaitsisivat palkinnon, sekä lyhyet perustelut: Anne Swärd : Viimeiseen hengenvetoon (Otava) Kiihkeänkaunis, tunteellinen romaani siitä, mikä on kahden ihmisen suhteessa syvintä ja haurainta. Kader Abdolah : Talo moskeijan vieressä (Bazar) Sympaattinen romaani, joka antaa Iranin kulttuurista ja uskonnosta monipuolisen ja värikkään kuvan mustavalkoisen sijaan. Erityisen onnistunut suomennos. Chris Cleave : Little Been tarina (Gummerus) Epäilenpä, että tämä ylsi Blogistanian viime vuoden luetuimpien kirjojen joukkoon - eikä syyttä. Taidokkaasti rakennettu romaani, jossa pienet lauseet, pienet teot saavat elämää suuremman merkityksen. Colm Tóibín : Brooklyn (Tammi) Samastuttava tarina irlantilaisen Eilisin muutosta Amerikkaan. Jää mieleen myös kansien sulkemisen jälkeen.

Colm Tóibín: The Master

It was imperative, he knew, that he go back to sleep. He could not lie awake during these hours. He wanted to sleep, enter a lovely blackness, a dark, but not too dark, resting place, unhaunted, unpeopled, with no flickering presences. It is nighttime, January 1895 in London. A man wakes up from a bad dream. Soon we learn that the man is none other than Henry James , the American author who lived most of his life in Europe at the turn of the 19th century. The Master is his fictional biography, relating about four years of the famous author's life from 1895 - 1899. Colm Tóibín does not reveal what in his novel is 'true' history and what are his own speculations about the novelist. The Master is, above all, a fictional work about what Henry James could have been like, and the kind of life that he may have led. James himself burned all his personal papers before he died in an attempt to keep his private life private. Yet this does not prevent Tóibín from using a fellow...

Colm Tóibín: The Blackwater Lightship

When Declan went to bed, the three women sat in the kitchen eating sandwiches. There was an uneasy peace between them; they chose topics with care and then moved cautiously, alert to the friction which even a stray word could cause. I've read many good things about this novel, including the fact that it was shortlisted for the Booker Prize in 1999. For some reason I was also fascinated by the name The Blackwater Lightship , it just sounded so strange and poetic. I didn't actually realize what the name referred to until about halfway through the novel: Blackwater is a town in Ireland and, in the novel, it has a lightship - a vessel with a light to guide ships, similar to a lighthouse. And, of course, an important symbol in the novel. The novel is set in Ireland in the early 1990s. Helen O'Doherty bids farewell to her husband and two children as they go on a trip to visit relatives. She is planning to follow them a few days later, but her plans change abruptly when a stra...

Colm Tóibín: Brooklyn

'Brooklyn changes every day,' Miss Bartocci said as Father Flood nodded. 'New people arrive and they could be Jewish or Irish or Polish or even coloured. Our old customers are moving out to Long Island and we can't follow them, so we need new customers every week. We treat everyone the same. I've been meaning to read something from Colm Tóibín for a while now. I wanted to get a hold of his two earlier novels, The Blackwater Lightship and The Master , both of which were short-listed for the Booker Prize. I've noticed that Booker Prize nominees and award-winners are often books that I also enjoy to read - as compared to e.g. Nobel Prize winners, which often seem a little out of my league... ;) However, the first Tóibín book that I got my hands on was Brooklyn , his newest novel, published in 2009. The novel also won the Costa Novel Award in the same year. And it certainly didn't lower my expectations for any other Tóibín novels that I might read in the f...