The Best of Benedict Kiely is a treasure trove of his best and most acclaimed stories, published to mark the centenary of the birth of this great twentieth-century Irish writer. Many of these stories were originally published in The New Yorker before appearing in four collections over a 24-year period during the writer’s lifetime. They are quintessential Kiely; superbly crafted, mingling song, anecdote, myth, history and a powerful sense of place into an allusive storyline. They show Kiely’s supreme gift in recording the feeling of lived life, pulsing with joys, disappointments and the accidental and deliberate digressions along the way. Colum McCann has observed in Kiely’s work that ‘… there is really no such thing as an end, because the stories keep unfolding and influencing’ and these classic Kiely stories, published together for the first time, will linger with the reader, young or old, long after the final sentence. -- book jacket
Benedict Kiely Livres






Proxopera
- 66pages
- 3 heures de lecture
The Collected Stories of Benedict Kiely
- 762pages
- 27 heures de lecture
Benedict Kiely's extensive collection showcases his mastery of storytelling, featuring complete short stories and novellas spanning forty years. With a unique voice and invisible technique, Kiely is celebrated alongside literary greats like Chekhov and Welty. This edition includes sixteen previously unpublished stories in the USA, a new introduction, and an afterword to his acclaimed anti-war fable, Proxopera. Recognized for his profound narrative style, Kiely offers readers a rich and memorable exploration of the human experience.
The Penguin book of Irish short stories
- 544pages
- 20 heures de lecture
Beginning with an exquisite love story - an ancient saga retold by Lady Gregory - and continuing with George Moore and the birth of the modern short story at the turn of the century, this highly representative collection includes both classic writers and contemporaries. It features the work of such preeminent literary figures as James Joyce, Sean O'Faolain, Mary Lavin, Frank O'Connor, and Liam O'Flaherty, whose work re-established the tradition of the short story; it concludes with more recent exponents of the form, all of them highly acclaimed, including Elizabeth Bowen, William Trevor, and Edna O'Brien.
Nothing Happens in Carmincross
- 240pages
- 9 heures de lecture
Mervyn Kavanagh, one of its wandering sons has been teaching in America's 'semi-Deep South', where he has acquired - and lost - a wife. As he sets off from Shannon toward tranquil Carmincross in the company of a former girlfriend, warm memories come flooding back. But one cloud proves impossible to dispel, for Mervyn is haunted by dark thoughts.
Benedict Kiely: Selected Stories
- 328pages
- 12 heures de lecture
Selected Stories gathers together some of the best examples of Benedict Kiely's work - a true and gifted man of letters. These stories sing in the unforgettable voice of an Irish master who continues to inspire readers and writers alike.
Dogs Enjoy the Morning is an uproarious novel full of weird and wonderful characters set in Cosmona, a fictitious village somewhere in Ireland ... The doctor and his loving wife are secretly watched by Gabriel Rock, a one-eyed local Peeping Tom. A shell-shocked chaplain stalks through the village with his three hounds in tow, like Fionn MacCool. Nurse 'Mouse' Walters is seduced by the bed-bound Brother Lane. Teresa and Dympna, two young ones on the tear in Dublin, get mixed up with Amantha who specializes in robbing sailors. Cathy Hanafin can only drink red wine and her absentee husband, Whispering Christy, is on his way home. And then Gabriel Rock and daft Nora consummate their passion on top of the tower for all the world to see ...