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Goodbye to the Hill

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  • 191pages
  • 7 heures de lecture

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Goodbye to the Hill has been hailed as an Irish classic and Lee Dunne as one of Ireland's most successful writers. In 1978, it was made into a stage play that had a 26-week run, “at a time when 4 weeks was a big deal in Dublin,” says Dunne. In this new edition, Dunne adds a preface that tells the quirky story of its overwhelming success.This is a rich novel, narrated by young Paddy Maguire, of his life growing into young adulthood in a Dublin slum of the late 1930s and 40s Ireland. Consider it a Dublin version of The Catcher in the Rye with lustful, lusty, thirsty, hard-working Paddy—a character as memorable as Holden Caulfield or Studs Lonigan—drolly detailing his adventurous adolescence. Goodbye to the Hill tells the story of a young man desperate to escape the confines of poverty and stifling mores, yet is an uplifting story, peppered with picaresque incidents, colourful language, and captures the delightful humour that transcends the hard times of Dublin's inner city life.

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Goodbye to the Hill, Lee Dunne

Langue
Année de publication
2005
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(souple)
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Titre
Goodbye to the Hill
Langue
Anglais
Auteurs
Lee Dunne
Publié
2005
Format
souple
Pages
191
ISBN10
1842232517
ISBN13
9781842232514
Séries
Évaluation
3,3 sur 5
Description
Goodbye to the Hill has been hailed as an Irish classic and Lee Dunne as one of Ireland's most successful writers. In 1978, it was made into a stage play that had a 26-week run, “at a time when 4 weeks was a big deal in Dublin,” says Dunne. In this new edition, Dunne adds a preface that tells the quirky story of its overwhelming success.This is a rich novel, narrated by young Paddy Maguire, of his life growing into young adulthood in a Dublin slum of the late 1930s and 40s Ireland. Consider it a Dublin version of The Catcher in the Rye with lustful, lusty, thirsty, hard-working Paddy—a character as memorable as Holden Caulfield or Studs Lonigan—drolly detailing his adventurous adolescence. Goodbye to the Hill tells the story of a young man desperate to escape the confines of poverty and stifling mores, yet is an uplifting story, peppered with picaresque incidents, colourful language, and captures the delightful humour that transcends the hard times of Dublin's inner city life.