From eccentric Joanna's boarding house, predatory Baba roams Dublin looking for men to give her a good time - and dragging with her a reluctant Cait, worrying about her figure and wanting to talk about books. Then she meets dark, long-faced Eugene Gaillard, a film director, and for a while Cait's romantic dreams seem to be fulfilled. But Eugene Gaillard is a Protestant divorce, and when Cait's drunkard father gets to hear of it, he summons a lynch mob.
Edna Obrien Livres
Edna O’Brien s’impose comme l’une des plus grandes chroniqueuses de l’expérience féminine au XXe siècle. Son œuvre, qui englobe romans, nouvelles et pièces de théâtre, explore en profondeur les vies intimes de ses personnages. O’Brien a abordé sans crainte des thèmes tels que la sexualité féminine et les contraintes sociales, s’attirant autant d’éloges que de controverses. Sa voix distinctive et sa profonde compréhension de la psychologie humaine en font une figure littéraire marquante.






Country girl. A memoir
- 357pages
- 13 heures de lecture
The acclaimed author describes her convent school education in Ireland, the scandal that ensued upon the publication of her first novel, and the wild 1960s parties that introduced her to people from all walks of life.
Wild Decembers
- 284pages
- 10 heures de lecture
O'Brien's latest novel charts the quick and critical demise of relations between "the warring sons of warring sons" fighting over inherited land in the countryside of western Ireland.
If one pairing of author and subject can, on its own, prove the unique merit of the Penguin Lives dynamic, it is Edna O'Brien writing on James Joyce. Of the great works of the twentieth century, his Ulysses stands alone as the groundbreaking, immeasurably influential masterpiece. Edna O'Brien, award-winning novelist and chronicler of Irish life in our day, approaches James Joyce as only a fellow countryman can in her beautiful, poetic rendering of his life. From his early days as the rambunctious Jesuit school student, one of ten children, through his flight to Europe and the success, love and despair he would experience there, to his final, frustrated days as "a poor old man in a long overcoat, an eyepatch and a stick, stones in his pocket to keep off marauding dogs, " O'Brien's deft, gentle, inciteful prose captures the essence of this troubled literary master.
The Country Girls
- 192pages
- 7 heures de lecture
This novel tells the story of two Irish girls, Caithleen Brady and Bridget Brennan, and their escape from a life filled with countryside and convent to the allure and the crowds, lights and noise of Dublin.



