The Blackwater Lightship
Material type:
- 9780330389860
- F/TOI
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo | F/TOI |
Available
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CA00019206 | |||
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Jaffna On Display | F/TOI |
Available
Order online |
JA00005290 |
Total holds: 0
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Set in Ireland in the 1990s, Colm Tóibín's The Blackwater Lightship tells the story of the Devereux family. Dora Devereux, her daughter Lily and her granddaughter Helen - have come together after years of strife and reached an uneasy truce. Helen's adored brother Declan is dying. Two friends join him and the women in a crumbling old house by the sea, where the six of them, from different generations and with different beliefs, must listen and come to terms with one another.
8.99 GBP
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
When Helen O!Doherty was 11, her father died of cancer, attended by her mother in Dublin while she and younger brother, Declan, were locked away from the truth in their grandparents! house on the Wexford coast. Now in her thirties, the successful school principal and mother of two is still in emotional limbo, and her bitterness toward the adults who made a trap of her innocence lingers. She must, however, confront the past if she is to understand another ever-present tragedy: Declan, who has not officially come out to his family, is dying of AIDS. The rhythm of conversation and argument carries TUibIn!s spare novel (after The Story of the Night, LJ 5/15/97), which was shortlisted for the 1999 Booker Prize for fiction. Sometimes his (thankfully) unobtrusive nature unsettled this reviewer; he refuses to heal Helen!s wounds completely by book!s end and lets her forgive at her own grudgingly human pace. Moreover, TUibIn!s lack of ego is admirable, and he creates a realistic portrait of adults acting like children and children acting like adults. Recommended for fans of contemporary Irish fiction."Heather McCormack, Library Journal (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
One of the young Turks of Irish fiction (The Heather Blazing; The Story of the Night) again examines themes of loss and death in a novel, shortlisted for the Booker Prize. In clipped, stripped-down prose, T¢ib¡n unfolds the family saga of Helen, mother Lily and grandmother Dora, three generations of women whose estrangement is ended by the grief they share. Helen's brother, Declan, is dying of AIDS. Helen receives the news of Declan's illness from Paul, her brother's best friend. Unlike her mother or grandmother, Helen has known for years that Declan is gay, but he has kept his illness a secret, even from her. Declan sends Paul to fetch Helen to the hospital, where he asks her to tell their mother and grandmother about his condition. Declan wants them all to spend a few days together at Granny's seaside house in Cush, Wexford. Years ago, Declan and Helen stayed there while Lily attended to their father, who was dying in a hospital in Dublin. Larry, another friend, completes the cast of characters surrounding Declan during his decline. T¢ib¡n has not written a "dying of AIDS" story here. Instead, by focusing on the relationships of those around Declan, he has created a delicately powerful story of a family's failure to face difficult feelings and their stubborn refusal to admit need. The novel does not take a flamboyant tone, but instead keeps faith with the quiet power of everyday life to imbue its straightforward prose with the essence of drama. (Aug.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reservedBooklist Review
Dublin writer Toibin presents a novel of reconciliation among family members estranged from each other and from themselves. Helen is an academician happily married to Hugh, with two little boys, but none have met her mother, Lily. When Helen's brother, Declan, declares he is dying of AIDS, the time comes to take him to their granny's house by the sea, where his two friends, Larry and Paul, arrive to help care for him. Granny, Lily, and the three men all settle into Granny's damp cottage, which brings forth the old woman's thinly veiled homophobia and a softer side of visiting Lily, which Declan clings to but which Helen, remembering the death of their father, distrusts. As Declan's health quickly declines, Larry bridges the gulf to Granny by drawing up architectural plans to renovate her house and by teaching her to drive; the dying man calls for his "mammy," thus precipitating a long-sought closeness with Lily, and even skeptical Helen gleans clarifying insights into her mother and herself in Toibin's somber yet heartbreakingly beautiful tale. --Whitney ScottKirkus Book Review
A dynamic, many-tendriled drama (on the Booker short list last year) by Irish writer Tóibín (The Story of the Night, 1997, etc.) shapes a complex view of intergenerational conflict at once modern and timeless, as a family assemble on the coast of Ireland to tend to one of their own, a young man losing ground in his struggle with AIDS. Helen has just packed off the husband and kids for a few days so that she can focus on hiring a teacher, as well as on her other administrative duties, at the end of a school term, when a stranger comes to her door to say that her brother is in the hospital, wanting to see her. Declan hasn't wanted to tell Helen that he has AIDS, but now, as the disease approaches its ravaging endgame, he needs her to know: what he needs is for Helen to tell their mother and bring her to him. Helen is more estranged from Lily than Declan is, but she does as asked and fetches her mother from work. Declan wants to leave the hospital and go to his grandmother's house seaside, where he and Helen spent a painful period of their youth while their father was dying from cancer. But he also wants his two closest gay friends to accompany him, and as this volatile mix settles in to the damp old house on a crumbling cliff, remarkable things happen. Worlds apart as they all seem at first, old and young, gay and straight, there are ties that bind them--not least their shared love for Declan--and in this respite from the mundane routines that would otherwise consume each of them, Lily's own long-unscalable cliffs of detachment begin to crumble, so that at last Helen and her brother can glimpse the mother they once knew and need so desperately now. In some ways reminiscent of playwright O'Neill's familial Sturm und Drang, this masterfully intense tale of woe and redemption has much to say about the primal forces that shape us. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.
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