Darran McCann
Autor(a) de After the Lockout
1 Work 27 Membros 2 Reviews
Obras de Darran McCann
Etiquetado
1916 Easter Uprising (1)
2012 (1)
a radical from the easter rising and the dublin lockout (1)
a recurring theme in irelands turbulent history (1)
Dublin Lockout (1)
europe on the brink of war (1)
fab subject disappointing read (1)
family (1)
fiction (1)
freebie (1)
General (1)
general fiction (1)
hated the hero hated the read (1)
he clashes with thew parish priest over religion and socialism (1)
historical fiction (1)
history (1)
idiot protagonist (1)
Ireland (3)
Irish History (1)
Irish History 1916-1918 (1)
Irish literature (2)
Kindle (1)
March 12 (1)
novel (1)
November 1917 (1)
owned-but-not-read (1)
political tensions (1)
proof (2)
religion (1)
Religion & Socialism (1)
Revolution and Rebellion (1)
social class (1)
victor lennon returns home to his village in ireland (1)
Vine (1)
vine harvest (1)
Conhecimento Comum
Membros
Resenhas
Marcado
elkiedee | 1 outra resenha | Jul 13, 2012 | "Being right is cold comfort when the whole world is wrong"
In November 1917, Victor Lennon receives the summons he’s been avoiding for ten years. While he’s been fighting for a communist republic in the Dublin Lockout and Easter Rising, his father has been drinking the family wealth. The dogmatic local bishop Benedict sends for the young man, bringing hardened and cynical politics into a thus-far tranquil village and ends up with much more of a revolutionary than he can handle. Victor helps his father back onto his feet, fixes up the farm, and falls back in love with his childhood sweetheart. If only Ida Harte would step out of the story...
McCann renders 1917 country Ireland well, with simple supporting characters and an undeniably strong sense of community in the village folk of Madden. The key characters, Benedict and Victor, are forcefully and diametrically opposed in their opinions, but have critical flaws of character which render both quite unsympathetic.
The narrative drags at first; almost the first third of the book was devoted to exposition and character description before Victor returns to Madden. I understand the need to give Victor a certain history and show the reader just how committed he is to the revolution, but it became dull rather quickly.
I did not finish this book; the combination of a very slow start and unsympathetic characters – Victor seems to bring all his trouble upon himself, philandering and politicising – made it a dull read for me. Those with a stronger interest in the era or more patience with stubborn, opinionated, womanising protagonists would enjoy it more.… (mais)
½In November 1917, Victor Lennon receives the summons he’s been avoiding for ten years. While he’s been fighting for a communist republic in the Dublin Lockout and Easter Rising, his father has been drinking the family wealth. The dogmatic local bishop Benedict sends for the young man, bringing hardened and cynical politics into a thus-far tranquil village and ends up with much more of a revolutionary than he can handle. Victor helps his father back onto his feet, fixes up the farm, and falls back in love with his childhood sweetheart. If only Ida Harte would step out of the story...
McCann renders 1917 country Ireland well, with simple supporting characters and an undeniably strong sense of community in the village folk of Madden. The key characters, Benedict and Victor, are forcefully and diametrically opposed in their opinions, but have critical flaws of character which render both quite unsympathetic.
The narrative drags at first; almost the first third of the book was devoted to exposition and character description before Victor returns to Madden. I understand the need to give Victor a certain history and show the reader just how committed he is to the revolution, but it became dull rather quickly.
I did not finish this book; the combination of a very slow start and unsympathetic characters – Victor seems to bring all his trouble upon himself, philandering and politicising – made it a dull read for me. Those with a stronger interest in the era or more patience with stubborn, opinionated, womanising protagonists would enjoy it more.… (mais)
1
Marcado
readingwithtea | 1 outra resenha | Jan 14, 2012 | Listas
Prêmios
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 1
- Membros
- 27
- Popularidade
- #483,027
- Avaliação
- 3.2
- Resenhas
- 2
- ISBNs
- 3
The "lockout" mentioned in the title was a 5 month struggle between workers and employers over the right to join a trade union - a story I'm embarrassed, given my interest in Irish and labour movement history, to realise I know very little about.
Victor's father Pius has been drinking himself to death, his 15 children scattered around the world, and Victor's friend Charlie persuades him to come home to try and rescue his heartbroken father. Not everyone is glad to see the great socialist hero return though. Local church figures fear he will challenge their power and influence and stir up the parishioners. Indeed, all kinds of trouble are brewing.
I was intrigued by the setting and thought this was an excellent debut with very well drawn characters - from Victor himself, still angry, still keen to help ordinary people organise for something better, but already feeling some cynicism. I also liked the look at class politics in the Irish struggle at this time, and thought Victor with all his contradictions and confusions was a memorable protagonist. I did wonder at times if there was too much authorial hindsight - would people like Victor in 1917 foresee the betrayal of the nationalist cause so clearly?
Recommended.… (mais)