The Bend for HomeHarcourt Brace, 1998 - 307 páginas The Bend for Home is a family portrait like no other. Naturally and unassumingly, Dermot Healy explores the obdurancy of memory and the vagaries of recollection. Wheter he is describing the family's move from the sleepy village of Finea, County Westmeath, to the bustling market town of Cavan; or his father, a kind policeman in poor health, who plays cards and drinks stout with his cronies; or his mother, whose stories young Dermot has heard so often that he believes they are his own; or Aunt Maisie, whose early disappointment in love has left her both dreamy and cynical (the two sisters run a thriving cafe and bakery), Healy maintains that magnificient true storyteller's distance and playfulness. At the center of the book is a diary the author kept as a boy and which his mother held on to, returning it only in her last years. Through this intriguing and often hilarious document-written in a code so secret even the author himself couldn't decipher parts of it-comes a powerfully conniving portrait of an artist unlike anything since James Joyce's classic. |
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Términos y frases comunes
Andy Anglo-Celt asks Maisie blue bottle Brady Breifne bridge brother called Castlepollard Cavan Cavan town Cootehill corridor County Westmeath dance dark Dermot Dermot Healy dining room dinner door dressed drink Eileen Ember Day eyes face father fell Finea Frank Frank Brady fucking girls glasses hand happened head Healy hear heard Helen Hy Brazil Jack Josie kitchen ladies lads laughing lifted light listened looked Loreto Lough Sheelin Main Street Maisie's Mary Miriam Monty Montgomery morning mother Mullahoran Nancy never night nodded Ollie Ollie Smith opened Pentecost priest radio Rannafast Reilly road round says Maisie Seamus Seamus Ennis Sheila shouted sitting sleep Sligo smiled someone stepped stood stopped talking There's things Thur toilet told Tony took Town Hall trousers turned Ulster Arms village waiting walked watch What's whispered window Winnie