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Description for The Free and Easy
Paperback. An American is burdened by a recurrent dream about his native Ireland, a country that had long ceased to interest or troubles him. Convinced that the Irish are asking him for help, he equips his errant grand-nephew, Tom Blessman, with a generous bank account, and dispatches him to the old country to offer assistance. Num Pages: 288 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 197 x 130 x 18. Weight in Grams: 200. Clean copy with minor shelf wear
New Yorker Tom Blessman arrives in Dublin with a purpose - to spend money. His mega-rich great uncle is suffering a recurrent dream in which the old country - a place he would much rather forget - is beseeching him for help. Tom must put a stop to it by giving the Irish whatever it is they want. But the young American finds an Ireland abuzz with glossy, happening people who apparently want for nothing. As he attempts to make sense of his mission - and resolve his own personal problems - he falls in with a lively crowd, all exploiting to the full this opportunistic new world. Central to the scene is the sprawling Kinane family, especially Eileen, a lost soul whose waif-like beauty Tom pursues through the city's bars, art galleries and gatherings, finding himself in exciting but increasingly perilous territory...
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2007
Publisher
Vintage
Condition
Used, Very Good
Number of Pages
288
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9780099492955
SKU
KJE0001507
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 2 to 4 working days
Ref
99-1
About Anne Haverty
Anne Haverty has published two previous novels: One Day As A Tiger (winner of the Rooney Prize and shortlisted for the 1997 Whitbread First Novel Award) and The Far Side Of A Kiss (longlisted for the Booker Prize). Chatto also publishes her poetry, including The Beauty of the Moon (a Poetry Book Society recommendation). Born in Tipperary, she now lives in Dublin.
Reviews for The Free and Easy
"Woven around a subtle reworking of a well-known literary archetype: the returned Yank...The Free and Easy gives a sardonic contemporary twist to this motif, [it] consistently entertains in its gentle mockery"
Liam Harte
Irish Times
"An acutely observed and perceptive portrait of the arriviste Irish...The writing, as admirers of Haverty would expect, is lucid and masterful. It captures the cynicism of a society for whom money is god without allowing that cynicism to corrupt its own integrity"
Justine McCarthy
Irish Independent
"A virtuoso performance...in turns hilarious, tender and acerbic"
Marcella Edwards
Literary Review
"Haverty's entertaining satire paints a vibrant picture of 21st Century Ireland"
Anthony Gardener
Mail on Sunday
"Haverty is one of our most interesting novelists, with an admirable chameleon quality evident in her books... Has an acutely observant eye... Her prose is stylish and possessed of a wicked humour"
Sunday Tribune
Liam Harte
Irish Times
"An acutely observed and perceptive portrait of the arriviste Irish...The writing, as admirers of Haverty would expect, is lucid and masterful. It captures the cynicism of a society for whom money is god without allowing that cynicism to corrupt its own integrity"
Justine McCarthy
Irish Independent
"A virtuoso performance...in turns hilarious, tender and acerbic"
Marcella Edwards
Literary Review
"Haverty's entertaining satire paints a vibrant picture of 21st Century Ireland"
Anthony Gardener
Mail on Sunday
"Haverty is one of our most interesting novelists, with an admirable chameleon quality evident in her books... Has an acutely observant eye... Her prose is stylish and possessed of a wicked humour"
Sunday Tribune