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Sebastian Barry

Autor von Ein verborgenes Leben

42+ Werke 8,281 Mitglieder 447 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 30 Lesern

Über den Autor

Sebastian Barry is a playwright whose work has been produced in London, Dublin, Sydney, and New York. He lives in Wicklow, Ireland, with his wife and three children. Sebastian Barry is an Irish writer and playwright, born in 1955. He is the author of two novels, A Long Long Way and Days Without mehr anzeigen End, which won the Costa Book Award for best novel. His other awards include the Kerry Group Irish Fiction Prize, the Irish Book Awards Novel of the Year, the Independent Booksellers Prize and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. (Bowker Author Biography) weniger anzeigen

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Werke von Sebastian Barry

Ein verborgenes Leben (2008) 2,855 Exemplare
Days without end (2016) 1,287 Exemplare
A Long, Long Way (2005) 1,235 Exemplare
On Canaan's Side (2011) 725 Exemplare
The Whereabouts of Eneas McNulty (0204) — Autor — 532 Exemplare
Old God's Time (2023) 419 Exemplare
Annie Dunne (2002) 380 Exemplare
The Temporary Gentleman (2014) 308 Exemplare
A Thousand Moons (2020) 290 Exemplare
The Steward of Christendom (1996) 50 Exemplare
De verre voortijd (2023) 21 Exemplare
Our Lady of Sligo (1998) 18 Exemplare
The Pride of Parnell Street (2007) 15 Exemplare
Andersen's English (2010) 13 Exemplare
Sebastian Barry Plays: 1 (1997) 12 Exemplare
On Blueberry Hill (2017) 11 Exemplare
Whistling Psyche/Fred and Jane (2004) 8 Exemplare
Hinterland (2002) 8 Exemplare
Dallas Sweetman (2008) 8 Exemplare
Macker's garden (1982) 7 Exemplare
The Engine of Owl-light (1987) 7 Exemplare
Tales of Ballycumber (2009) 5 Exemplare
The Pinkening Boy (2004) 5 Exemplare
The Water-Colourist (1983) 3 Exemplare
Temps immemorials (2023) 2 Exemplare
Au bon vieux temps de Dieu (2023) 2 Exemplare
A Russian Beauty 1 Exemplar
The Rhetorical Town (1985) 1 Exemplar
Boss Grady's Boys (2006) 1 Exemplar
Gentleman auf Zeit (2017) 1 Exemplar
Whistling Psyche (2010) 1 Exemplar
White Woman Street 1 Exemplar
Boss Grady's boys 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

In Parenthesis (1937) — Vorwort, einige Ausgaben622 Exemplare
The Penguin Book of Irish Fiction (1999) — Mitwirkender — 151 Exemplare
Midsummer Nights (1702) — Mitwirkender — 74 Exemplare
The Secret Scripture [2016 film] (2016) — Original book — 7 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Barry, Sebastian
Rechtmäßiger Name
Barry, Sebastian
Geburtstag
1955-07-05
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
Irland
Geburtsort
Dublin, Irland
Wohnorte
Dublin, Irland
County Wicklow, Irland
Ausbildung
Trinity College, Dublin
Catholic University School
Berufe
Dramatiker
Romanautor
Dichter
Beziehungen
O'Hara, Joan (Mutter)
Organisationen
Harry Ransom Center
University of Iowa
Villanova University
Preise und Auszeichnungen
Costa Novel Award (2017)
Costa Novel Award (2008)
Lloyds Private Banking Playwright of the Year Award (1995)
Agent
Derek Johns (AP Watt)
Kurzbiographie
Sebastian Barry is an Irish novelist, playwright and poet. He was named Laureate for Irish Fiction, 2019–2021. He is noted for his dense literary writing style and is considered one of Ireland's finest writers.

Mitglieder

Diskussionen

October 2022: Sebastian Barry in Monthly Author Reads (Oktober 2022)
On Canaan's Side by Sebastian Barry in Booker Prize (September 2011)

Rezensionen

A wonderful book. Roseanne McNulty, 100 years old, is a long-term patient of Roscommon Mental Hospital. She's Doctor Grene's patient. Secretly, she starts to record her memories, shifting, uncertain, lyrically expressed. Doctor Grene, whose own life is difficult, has access to a different version of her life story, and she does not confide her own to him. Hers was a life lived against a background of civil war and religious intolerance, of poverty, and the mental illness of her mother. Though many of her memories are bleak, Roseanne herself is warm, often funny, always sympathetic. Dr. Grene's losses and hurts are woven into the narrative, and at the end, his history, and that of Roseanne are interlinked in a most surprising way. This is a beautifully written and tragic novel about damaged but utterly sympathetic characters.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
Margaret09 | 152 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 15, 2024 |
We're in Dublin in the 1990s, meeting the widowed and recently retired Tom Kettle, who had been a police detective, I immediately engaged with this novel, which lilted along in a strong Irish accent, and which I'd have happily read with no plot at all, for the sake of accompanying Tom Kettle through his retirement. But there is a plot. And it's not straightforward. It loops back and forth through memory, and I really don't want to give anything away except to say it does involve the sad, bad old story of sexual abuse of children by Catholic clergy. Kettle is an unreliable narrator. Facts haze in and out, can be deliberately confusing. How difficult it is to tell a story rooted in a barely-remembered or understood past. But there is love, enduring love, underlying everything. A book to savour, despite the unappetising events that underpin it.… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
Margaret09 | 32 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 15, 2024 |
From the opening line (“He was born in the dying days.”) Barry is clear about the theme and trajectory of this work of historical fiction which takes place mostly during WW1. Shifting between the tensions in Ireland, from the Easter Rising and the independence movement, to the infamous fields of Flanders and battle-scarred Belgium, Barry personifies the Lost Generation through the character of Willie Dunne. The babies born in 1896 are grist for the millstone of war, their delivery nurses blood-stained uniforms likened to butcher’s aprons.

Although the language is often beautifully rendered and a real sense of Irish sensibility permeates the book, the problem lies in its lack of revelation: there are no real surprises along the way, in either character development or narrative arc. We learn nothing we did not already know. Perhaps for those unfamiliar with 20th century Irish history or who have not read novels such as All Quiet On the Western Front and many other fine novels about the horrors of the First World War, this book may introduce new perspectives. At times, it almost felt like a checklist: innocent young Everyman, youthful lust/ love, father and son symbolizing dying of old world and the inability of the previous generations to understand the new, bromance, explanation of war (gas, attrition, no man’s land, trench, officer vs private) all dutifully employed.

One expects a war novel to describe harrowing scenes. The descriptions of gas attacks were relatively restrained and other soldier deaths were not prolonged pages of horror. The more disturbing imagery was reserved for the mutilation and rape of a woman and the butchering of an animal. Too many authors employ these scenes as a lazy way to announce The Moral Decay of War, the degradation and sheer vileness at work, while sparing the male characters similar graphic portrayals.

There are some exquisite phrasings and an immediacy to the work that certainly warrant admiration. But it is a book most of us have read before; the individual characters a little too subsumed by theme.
… (mehr)
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
saschenka | 55 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 6, 2024 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
42
Auch von
4
Mitglieder
8,281
Beliebtheit
#2,920
Bewertung
3.9
Rezensionen
447
ISBNs
327
Sprachen
16
Favoriten
30

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