Brooklyn
A Novel
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From the award-winning author of THE MASTER, a moving historical novel--by far Toibin's most accessible book--set in Brooklyn and Ireland in the early 1950s about a young woman torn between her family and her past in Ireland and the American who wins her heart.
Publisher:
New York : - Scribner
Pages:
262
Edition:
1st Scribner hardcover ed
ISBN:
9781439138311, 1439138311, 9780330425155
Language:
English
Statement of responsibility:
Colm Tóibín
Physical description:
262 p. ; 23 cm.
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Add a Commenta little on the "fluff" side, yet I coulden't put it down.
A nice coming of age story about an Irish immigrant in the post WWII days. Eilis the main character was a thoughtful and conservative person - careful of everything she did and said to her friends and relatives. I expected a different end to the book, it certainly made me read it quickly to see what would happen. I would recommend it as a book club book as well.
Book Club
Very disappointing. I kept debating whether or not to keep reading, because it felt like nothing was happening, and the characters felt so flat. Eventually, some things do happen, but it didn't make it much better. It also didn't feel like it took place in the 1950s, and I didn't feel like I cared for any of the characters.
The library summarizes this story as: In the early 1950s, Eilis Lacey leaves her widowed mother and charismatic sister behind in Ireland and heads for Brooklyn, where she finds a sort of happiness, but tragic news summons her back to Ireland, and she finds herself facing an impossible decision. In my opinion, Eilis’s decision to return to America was far from impossible: quiter the opposite... it was a no-brainer. She had a job with a future there. She loved her American sweetheart, and she left him with a promise to return to him after she cared for her grieving mother. End of story. The fact that Eilis was actually tempted to stay in Ireland diminished her in my eye. Where was her spunk? Her resolve? Really quite a light-weight book overall.
I found the story flat and I didn’t much like the characters. Its merit, I suppose, was in describing how some women probably lived in those days, pummeled about by the people in their lives rather than following their hearts. Where was Eilis’s resolve? Her spunk? I don’t think she had much of either. There was an innocence about her that made her susceptible to the whims of others. She drifted along doing whatever others expected of her. She judged others but didn’t see what was lacking in herself. Really quite a light-weight book overall. Or maybe that was actually how it was for women in the 1950s? If so, then I'm so glad we've moved on.
Sweet read about a young woman who immigrates to America.
Young Irish woman emigrates to Brooklyn, relationship with Italian-American young man. She goes back to Ireland but eventually returns. OK
The slow pace to this story really allows the reader to get to know the main character. I didn't think I would like this story, but I did.
I loved this book. It moved in an understated manner but it was riveting and held a suspense and tension I did not expect.