Author

Publication

2010 - Scribner, New York, New York (State)

Language

English

Word Count

0 words, Guess

Page Count

0 pages

Identifiers

and 13 more
  • ISBN-139781439149836
  • ISBN-139781442337282
  • ISBN-139781442339927
  • ISBN-10143913832X
  • ISBN-101439149836
  • ISBN-101442337281
  • ISBN-101442339926
  • Library of Congress Control Number2010032931
  • OCLC Control Number548607406
  • Better World Books9781439149836
  • Better World Books9781439195963
  • Better World Books9781442339927
  • Open LibraryOL24411924M

Classifications

  • DDC823/.914
  • LCCPR6070.O455 E47 2010
  • LCCPR6070.O455 E47 2011
and 1 more
  • LCCPR6070.O455E47 2010

Description

Colm Tóibín’s exquisitely written new stories, set in present-day Ireland, 1970s Spain and nineteenthcentury England, are about people linked by love, loneliness and desire. Tóibín is a master at portraying mute emotion, intense intimacies that remain unacknowledged or unspoken. In this stunning collection, he cements his status as “his generation’s most gifted writer of love’s complicated, contradictory power” (Los Angeles Times). “Silence” is a brilliant historical set piece about Lady Gregory, widowed and abandoned by her lover, who tells the writer Henry James a confessional story at a dinner party. In “Two Women,” an eminent Irish set designer, aloof and prickly, takes a job in her homeland, and is forced to confront devastating emotions she has long repressed. “The New Spain” is the story of an intransigent woman who returns home after a decade in exile and shatters the fragile peace her family has forged in the post-Franco world. And in the breathtaking long story “The Street,” Tóibín imagines a startling relationship between two Pakistani workers in Barcelona—a taboo affair in a community ruled by obedience and silence. Tóibín’s characters are often difficult and combative, compelled to disguise their vulnerability and longings. Yet he unmasks them, and in doing so offers us a set of extraordinarily moving stories that remind us of the fragility and individuality of human life. As The New York Review of Books has said, Tóibín “understands the tenuousness of love and comfort—and, after everything, its necessity.”

Subjects

Other Editions

  • The empty family: storiesScribner2010-01-01

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