About this item
Highlights
- From "Ireland's finest living novelist" (Roddy Doyle)--a funny, moving, exquisitely written novel about a community on the cusp of changeAcclaimed Irish author Dermot Healy's first novel in more than ten years is a rich, beguiling, and wonderfully funny story about community, family, love, and bonds across generations, an epic in miniature that features an unforgettable cast of innocents and broken eccentrics.
- About the Author: Dermot Healy is a poet, novelist, and dramatist.
- 448 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Literary
Description
Book Synopsis
From "Ireland's finest living novelist" (Roddy Doyle)--a funny, moving, exquisitely written novel about a community on the cusp of changeAcclaimed Irish author Dermot Healy's first novel in more than ten years is a rich, beguiling, and wonderfully funny story about community, family, love, and bonds across generations, an epic in miniature that features an unforgettable cast of innocents and broken eccentrics. The novel presents the bemusing and unsettling misadventures of Philip Feeney, known to one and all as Mister Psyche, a teenager haunted by a recent traumatic event who takes up with two men some fifty years his senior. Its still, lyrical power casts a miraculous literary spell and will appeal to readers of William Trevor, Roddy Doyle, John McGahern, and Anne Enright.
Review Quotes
Praise for Long Time, No See "A grand read, funny and provocative...tenderness and affection win out despite gunfire, despite ancient jealousies and grudges." --Annie Proulx, The Guardian
"Funny, sad, wild, tender, profound, brilliant...Ireland's finest living novelist." --Roddy Doyle
"A family saga bristling with curiously appealing oddballs and misfits." --Entertainment Weekly
"Healy's first novel in ten years is a triumphant return...A beautiful account of one person's acceptance of his own quiet heroism." --Library Journal
"Highly stylized, chock-full of colorful dialogue, and steeped in Irish idioms, this is a leisurely read about ordinary folk acting out the dramas that make a life." --Publishers Weekly
"Compassionate and elegiac...a celebration of the whole gift of existence...everyday chores and family obligations are elevated to the level of epiphany." --The Times Literary Supplement
"Unforgettable...Nothing happens, but everything happens. Times passes. People die. It all seems so true to actual life, so tangible and authentic...so real you feel you could step into the book and live there." --The Sunday Independent
"Terrific and exhilarating...Healy's characters have mouths full of poetry... the poetry of the everyday, laconic, idiosyncratic, and wonderfully droll...Every page is a pleasure to read and the entire book is, as one of Healy's characters might put it, an astonishment." --The Sunday Times
"A richly compelling comic-sad tapestry of love and death in which, like the pauses in a Pinter play, truth lurks in what's left unsaid, catching us off guard." --The Independent
About the Author
Dermot Healy is a poet, novelist, and dramatist. His books include the novels A Goat's Song and Sudden Times and the memoir The Bend for Home. He lives in County Sligo, Ireland.