The Strangers’ House: Writing Northern Ireland

by Alexander Poots

The Strangers’ House: Writing Northern Ireland

by Alexander Poots

£25.00

In stock (can be backordered)

Northern Ireland is one hundred years old. Northern Ireland does not exist. Both of these statements are true.

It just depends on who you ask. How do you write about a place like this? THE STRANGERS’ HOUSE asks this question of the region’s greatest writers, living and dead. What have they made of Northern Ireland – and what has Northern Ireland made of them?Northern Ireland is roughly the same size as the State of Connecticut, yet has produced an extraordinary number of celebrated poets and novelists.

Louis MacNeice, too clever to be happy, formed by his childhood on the shores of Belfast Lough. C. S.

Lewis, who discovered Narnia in the rolling drumlins and black rock of County Down. Anna Burns, chronicler of North Belfast and winner of the Booker Prize. And Seamus Heaney, the man of wry precision, the poet with the gift of surprise.

As well as household names, Poots also examines writers who may be less familiar to an American readership. These include the dark and bawdy novels of Ian Cochrane, a celebrated raconteur obsessed with Columbo, and Forrest Reid, a man who saw Arcadia in the Irish countryside, and who was, perhaps, the North’s first queer author. Reading the work of these writers together produces a testament to over one hundred years of literary endeavour and human struggle.

THE STRANGERS’ HOUSE is the story of how men and women have written about a home divided, and used their work to move, in the words of Seamus Heaney, “like a double agent among the big concepts.”Authors and works discussed… C. S.

Lewis – Surprised by JoySeamus Heaney – NorthAnna Burns – Milkman Louis MacNeice – Autumn Journal Forrest Reid – Brian Westby Derek Mahon – A Disused Shed in Co. Wexford Michael Longley – Kindertotenlieder Medbh McGuckian – Drawing Ballerinas Patrick Kavanagh – The Green FoolIan Cochrane – F for Ferg

Additional Information

ISBN9781538701577
Weight500 g
Dimensions25 × 16 × 4 cm

You may also like

  • Close To Home

    £14.99

    ‘Luminous and devastating, a portrait of modern masculinity as shaped by class, by trauma, and by silence, but also by the courage to love and to survive"

  • Milkman

    by Anna Burns

    £8.99
    In an unnamed city, where to be interesting is dangerous, an eighteen-year-old woman has attracted the unwanted and unavoidable attention of a powerful and frightening older man, 'Milkman'. In this co...