The visitors
Material type:
- 9781408850886
- F/OKE
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Colombo | F/OKE |
Available
Order online |
CA00019973 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
One warm July night, when thoughts of Ireland are far from James Dwyer's mind, a homeless man with a sunburnt face, who smells like dry wood, comes to the screen door of his Michigan apartment. Walter has two messages. The first is that an old lady is lying in the middle of his street. But when James goes to look there's nobody to be seen. The second, while apparently more ordinary, is ultimately more troubling: a childhood friend wants him to visit.
Kevin Lyons, the wayward older son of a neighbouring builder James knew long ago as a boy in Tipperary, now lives in the USA too, and wants to reconnect with his past. But James, who has spent years establishing the foundations of his American life, has put that past behind him.
As the day of the visit approaches, James slowly re-examines the mysteries of that time: what happened to Aunt Tess, who went away to become a nurse in Dublin; what Kevin's father was really doing late at night by candlelight in his makeshift office in the yard; what became of Kevin's red-haired sister Una, who young Jimmy fell for in a big way and whether, after all these years, people like Kevin ever really change.
The Visitors is a captivating story of the interwoven fates of two families, of the gap between childhood and the adult world, between a river in Ireland (and all that happened there) and another in America, and of the shocking revelations that come with crossing the divide.
£8.99
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
Story Prize winner O'Keeffe's first novel after The Hill Road tells the story of two Irish families, the Dwyers and the Lyons, and how the lives of the children especially become entangled, more by proximity than by passion. As the children scatter abroad to earn their living, their connections become tenuous but remain as an unrelenting itch in the mind of Jimmy Dwyer, the narrator. Jimmy is born in the rural county Limerick, moves to Dublin as a teenager, and finally settles in Ann Arbor, MI. He evokes the frustration of poverty, rural life, and puberty and depicts the inconsistency of moral convictions-those of his community as well as his own. When an unexpected reunion with his childhood friend Kevin Lyons and new information about the reality of the past becomes available, Jimmy's perspective changes. VERDICT O'Keeffe paints a picture of self-centered introspection, Irish gloom, and the ironic repetition of events from generation to generation that will appeal to most fiction readers.-Joanna Burkhardt, Univ. of Rhode Island Libs., Providence (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Review
Taken as a whole, this slow-burner from O'Keeffe (The Hill Road) delivers a devastating emotional wallop. Winner of the 2006 Story Prize, O'Keeffe has turned from tales of those who stayed in Ireland to one about those who left. The trajectory of expat protagonist James Dwyer is not dissimilar to O'Keeffe's own journey from Ireland to America. As the novel opens in the States, Jimmy is visited by an indigent man who carries a message from Jimmy's past. The novel is heedless of time, meandering back and forth through Jimmy's life and the lives of his forbears to bring the reader up to speed about the import of the message, which turns out to be from Jimmy's childhood nemesis, Kevin Lyons. We learn, gradually, of the inextricable bonds between the Lyons family and the Dwyers back in County Limerick, about the affairs and tragedies of aunts, fathers, brothers, sisters, and namesakes. It is not until Jimmy begins to read the diary left behind by Kevin's dad, Michael, that the reader becomes aware that the author is up to something quite remarkable. The very air Jimmy breathes seems rife with memory-not only his, but his family's-pregnant with the secrets of those who went before him. By the time all is revealed, the reader is captivated and moved. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.Booklist Review
Reminiscent of his work in The Hill Road (2005), O'Keeffe's second book flits easily through time and space to tell the story of two Irish families linked intimately over several generations. Leaving behind his family's farm in rural Ireland, James Dwyer travels first to Dublin, then to Boston, arriving finally at school in Ann Arbor, Michigan. There he receives an invitation to visit a childhood neighbor, Kevin Lyons, now living in New York. James never liked Kevin and is determined to decline the request, but their fathers were best friends, and they are further linked through romantic entanglements with each other's siblings. Ultimately, James cannot deny the invitation, and the meeting only serves to bind the two together more firmly through shared memories and tragedy. By exploring the characters' intertwined lives, O'Keeffe shows that we are the sum of our past experiences but that even the same history tells a different story for each of us. He weaves a poignant tale of hope and loss that is colorful and engaging in its detail and highly recommended.--Ophoff, Cortney Copyright 2010 BooklistKirkus Book Review
A young Irishman immigrates to the States and finds he can't escape family and friendsor enemies. James Dwyer narrates the story, from his growing up in rural Ireland to his job in a Dublin pub to his move to the States, working as a housepainter and as a baker. The drama in his life primarily involves family and his family's acquaintances. His father is a plainspoken farmer, and James definitively does not want to follow in his dad's vocational footsteps. His father's best friend is Michael Lyons, and it's the Lyons family with whom James' life gets most intertwined. Michael's son Kevin is a few years older than James and something of a bully as they're growing up. While an adolescent, James witnesses a sexual act between Kevin and James' sister Tess, and later, love relationships get even more complicated when James falls in love with Kevin's sister Una. The novel opens mysteriously when an old man named Walter knocks on James' door in Ann Arbor, claims to have seen a woman lying in the street and uses that as an opening to start a conversation with James. We find out that this is no chance encounter but rather that Walter is actually a messenger from Kevin, now living in upstate New York and doing well financially by buying houses, fixing them up and then reselling them at an impressive profit. James reluctantly makes the trip to see Kevin, who wants James to read Michael's old journals, which contain revelations about both families. O'Keeffe closely observes human interactions and conveys his narrative largely through glistening dialogue that has the feel of Celtic folk poetry.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.