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Jamie ONeill

    1 gennaio 1962

    Jamie O'Neill è un autore irlandese la cui opera è caratterizzata da una profonda comprensione della psiche umana e della complessità delle relazioni. La sua scrittura è spesso paragonata ai classici della letteratura irlandese, pur mantenendo uno stile unico e coinvolgente. La narrativa di O'Neill approfondisce temi di identità, amore e perdita, creando personaggi intricati e comprensibili. I suoi romanzi sono celebrati per il loro valore letterario e la loro capacità di evocare forti risposte emotive nei lettori.

    Kilbrack
    At swim, two boys
    • At swim, two boys

      • 656pagine
      • 23 ore di lettura

      ~ The Irish contemporary classic in a beautiful new edition ~ 'Weren't you never out for an easy dip?' he asked . . . 'I don't mean the baths, I mean with a pal. For a lark like.' Out at the Forty Foot, that great jut of Dublin rock where gentlemen bathe in the scandalous nude, two boys meet day after day. There they make a pact: that Doyler will teach Jim to swim, and in a year, they will swim the bay to the distant beacon of the Muglins rock, to raise the Green and claim it for themselves. As a turbulent year drives inexorably towards the Easter Rising of 1916 and Ireland sets forth on a path to uncertain glory, a tender, secret love story unfolds. Written with verve and mastery in a modern Irish tradition descended from James Joyce and Flann O'Brien, At Swim, Two Boys is a shimmering novel of unforgettable ambition, intensity and humanity. 'One of the greatest Irish novels ever written' David Marcus 'The music of Jamie O'Neill's prose creates a new Irish symphony' Peter Ackroyd 'Heartachingly beautiful' Independent on Sunday 'A vivid picture of human freedom' Sunday Times

      At swim, two boys
    • Kilbrack

      • 304pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      A cast of rampant miscreants, brilliantly witty dialogue, and dark imaginings make for compulsive comic reading in "Kilbrack," written more than a decade before "At Swim, Two Boys" established O'Neill as "one of the most powerful voices in contemporary Irish fiction" ("The Observer").

      Kilbrack