Jumat, 23 November 2018

Ebook-Download When All is Said: The Number One Irish bestselling phenomenon, by Anne Griffin

Ebook-Download When All is Said: The Number One Irish bestselling phenomenon, by Anne Griffin

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When All is Said: The Number One Irish bestselling phenomenon, by Anne Griffin

When All is Said: The Number One Irish bestselling phenomenon, by Anne Griffin


When All is Said: The Number One Irish bestselling phenomenon, by Anne Griffin


Ebook-Download When All is Said: The Number One Irish bestselling phenomenon, by Anne Griffin

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When All is Said: The Number One Irish bestselling phenomenon, by Anne Griffin

Pressestimmen

[An] impressively confident debut ... Maurice Hannigan emerges as an engaging, compassionate creation (Guardian)Anne Griffin's debut novel is a must read. Beautifully observed, masterful story telling - stunning! (Graham Norton)There is something special here . . . The next big name to emerge from the Irish writing scene. (John Boyne)Griffin is a magical storyteller whose prose is effortless and clear. She conjures an intimate, poignant and ultimately enthralling portrait of a man who has battled loneliness and other demons throughout his life. Maurice is superbly well-realised: a character who tries to make amends and, in so doing, cracked my heart. (Fanny Blake Daily Mail)A book to savour, and pass on. An absolute joy (Sunday Mirror)A hugely enjoyable, engrossing novel, a genuine page-turner. (Donal Ryan)Maurice Hannigan is a wonderful invention, whose bitter-sweet meditations will stay long in the reader's mind. Anne Griffin has fashioned a rare jewel. (John Banville)This is how you tell a story (Cecelia Ahern)[Anne Griffin] builds a remarkably rich sense of place, while also tracing the wider changes affecting Ireland. ...Maurice is a lovingly rendered example of the current vogue for characters who have fallen through the cracks (Sunday Times)Beautifully written, unhurried and thoughtful, and a character you love from the off. (Kit de Waal)

Werbetext

Five toasts. Five people. One lifetime.

Alle Produktbeschreibungen

Produktinformation

Taschenbuch: 272 Seiten

Verlag: Sceptre (27. Juni 2019)

Sprache: Englisch

ISBN-10: 1529304296

ISBN-13: 978-1529304299

Größe und/oder Gewicht:

12,8 x 1,8 x 19,7 cm

Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:

4.2 von 5 Sternen

3 Kundenrezensionen

Amazon Bestseller-Rang:

Nr. 103.886 in Fremdsprachige Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Fremdsprachige Bücher)

This is a stunner of a book you won't be able to put down. Loved every line, every emotion it caused. Brilliant writing bringing an authentic world and characters alive.

I started reading this book with high expectations – interesting setting, highly praised on GoodReads. I really expected to love this book but it was not to be, unfortunately.Maurice Hannigan, 84, sits in an old hotel at the bar and drinks to the people he loved most and who all have passed away before him, telling us about his relationship with them and, consequently, about his life. The son of an Irish farmer, he, too, sets out on this path and soon by far surpasses his parents and becomes a wealthy and well-respected man.We learn about the Dollards, formerly major land owners and employing Maurice’s mother and himself, whom he loved to hate for his entire life. He toasts to his brother Tony who died as a young man, his first child, Molly, his sister-in-law Noreen, his son, Kevin, a well-known journalist who has emigrated to the USA and, last but not least, his wife Sadie.Griffin tells her story, Maurice’s life, in long chapters most of which overlap with each other in narrated time. This gives her room to explore each relationship deeply and allows for concentrating on their respective unique aspects. Unfortunately, the overlap does cause some conflicts that are hard to handle gracefully. Let me give you an actual example:“It was twenty-seven years later that I learned the origin of the coin from Emily at that special dinner she’d arranged. But even then she’d been holding back. And it wasn’t until a year after that again that I found out the real consequence of its theft. And it was all because of Noreen, would you believe.”I’m calling this, well, clumsy. You might consider it a narrative device, I don’t like it, sorry.In between each of those toasts we’re getting a small glimpse into the current time and Maurice’s state of mind which is – at the very least – bordering on depression. By his own admission, Maurice is sleeping very badly (“I’ve stopped sleeping, have I told you? Two hours, three if I’m lucky now and then I’m awake.”), feeling bad and guilty as well as being prone to pondering (“Staring at the ceiling, going over it again, this bloody decision”). He’s tired and pretty much hopeless (“I feel tired and, if I’m honest, afraid.”) - all clinical symptoms of a depression.Maurice even has people worrying about him (e. g. David, a social worker; Emily, the hotel’s owner; Robert, his notary) but none of them seem to recognise that and help him.Griffin ends the book as anyone past the first chapter will know – “when all is said”, Maurice tries to take his own life. I’m sure Griffin doesn’t want to “promote” suicide as a way out of acute grief but a bestselling book ending like that does make me feel uncomfortable.Putting that thought aside, I still didn’t really warm to the book. I can’t even put my finger on the exact reasons: Griffin’s language is believable (if restricted to Maurice’s vocabulary) and vivid. The story itself is plausible – everything in Maurice’s life could have happened just like it is told. Maybe that’s in fact part of my problem with the book – I felt myself nodding and registering the narrated facts but I was rarely touched by the story.There were a few passages that really gripped me, especially since I’m a father and, obviously, a son myself (“fathers have a lot to answer for”), and made me swallow, e. g. this passage:“But no, I mean, sorry for the father I’ve been. I know, really I do, that I could’ve been better. That I could’ve listened more, that I could’ve accepted you and all you’ve become with a little more grace.”Boy, can I relate to that...Unfortunately, this emotional engagement remains the exception for me in this book. Too rare and, in the end, too late.To be able to really love a book, it needs to strike a chord within myself. I’m not an analytic reader, you won’t catch me scientifically dissect a book. The books I’ve loved most so far are those that make me enthuse about them to my wife and children till they send me somewhere else (or leave themselves). There are books (you can find them in my “Favourites” shelf on GoodReads) that make my soul thrive and rejoice (or only mentioning their names brings tears to my eyes) and I cannot help but sing their praise.I fully expected “When All Is Said” to be such a book but it felt too shallow, it never engaged me emotionally and, quite possibly, maybe it’s all me, myself and I who’s to blame for that.I guess you’ll have to find out yourself.

I loved ‘When all is said’ and its story of the life of Maurice.You never know what it is that happened in your life that ends up having a massive impact on yourself.The story of Maurice was so well written, I felt like being with him in that bar in the Hotel toasting the 5 people in his life that shaped him - and listening to his/ their story. I think the fact that I have a soft spot for anything Irish made me feel even more drawn to this grumpy old man with his Irish accent and his life story, that I could actually hear him speak in my mind. I am now thinking about the 5 people I would like to toast when I will have reached the grand age of 84. Brilliant novel.

Maurice Hannigan has decided to end his life and has made plans to do so. The County Meath farmer/entrepreneur has been a success since long before the "Celtic Tiger" had roared in the 1990's and he is the main character in Anne Griffin's superb novel, "When All is Said". Griffin uses Maurice's suicide note to his Kevin, his only child, to fill out the details of Maurice's life and his deep connections with his family and friends.Maurice is thinking about the five most important people in his long life. The book dwells on those now mostly long-dead individuals who Maurice has carried with him throughout his life. They include his older brother - his mentor and protector when he was growing up and the daughter, Molly, who was delivered still-born to he and his wife and who remains with him and even ages as he does. The others, his late wife, his mentally impaired sister-in-law, and his son, all play a huge part in Maurice's rise.While these five individuals have been influencial to Maurice, maybe the most important object was a silver coin. This coin, which pictured the future King Edward VIII, was the catalyst of the abject ruin that came to the Dollard family, the local wealthy family. Both Maurice and his beloved mother had been employed by the Dollards and Maurice was often the victim of beatings by the Dollard son. Much of Maurice's life was devoted to bringing the family down, which he did, with mixed results.Basically, though, Maurice Hannigan lived a good life, giving back to the community in which he lived. He loved his wife and was a good husband. Anne Griffin's wonderful book gives the reader Maurice and "his" Ireland.

A simply beautiful book. This is Anne Griffin’s debut novel WHEN ALL IS SAID. A man looks back at his life through a series of toasts that he makes to five different people who have had an impact on his life. As he reflects on his long life, growing up in a small Irish town, about having lost his true love, about his childhood, and the success that he has achieved but not necessarily that which he is proud of. What an insightful, contemplative story of a man who has been brought to his knees with intense physical and emotional pain, and yet, exquisite love. Not quite sure how to come to terms with where his life has come to, and not necessarily wanting to make amends or change things, but more to just be honest with himself, this is his last hurrah. There is a true beauty in the slow reveal of a life. Of the domino effect that one small move can have on a series of things. A story that causes you to think about your own actions and how your every move touches another’s. Maurice’s character might bring you to laugh, cry, want to hold his hand, and perhaps, sidle up to the bar and share a fine glass of whiskey with him. WHEN ALL IS SAID is what reading is all about.

I loved this book and could not put it down. I think it is one of the best books I have read dealing with grief and loss. A man sitting in a bar drinks a toast to the significant people in his life as he reviews his 82 years of life. He tells us about all the highs and lows with laughter and with tears. I highly recommend.

I love Irish writers and stories set in Ireland – running the literary gamut from Maeve Binchy to John Boyne. Now I’ll add Anne Griffin to that list! “When All is Said” is beautifully written, poignant, captivating, and ultimately surprising.Eight-four year old, Maurice Hannigan, sits at the bar of the Rainsford House Hotel in Rainsford County, Ireland, two years since his wife Sadie died (“It feels like a lifetime to me.”) He’s sold everything, and booked the Honeymoon suite for the night. Somethings up – maybe something bad – but we are already captivated by Maurice’s narrative voice – we can hear it in our head as we read – his Irish accent and syntax and his beautiful (and surprisingly youthful) “broadcasting” voice.Reader, I felt as if I was sitting next to him at the bar as he proceeded to recount his life to his absent son, through five toasts to the five people who mattered most to him in life. Maurice’s honesty about his failings and mistakes, along with his great loves, won’t fail to touch your heart.

This book broke my heart in a good way if that makes any sense. The book begins at 6:25 pm with 84 year old Maurice Hannigan sitting in the bar of the Rainsford House Hotel in Rainsford, Co. Meath, Ireland. His wife died two years earlier, he has packed his belongings, sold his property and given away his dog. I'm thinking that he is planning to end his life at the end of the night. It breaks my heart because I already care about him. But before he goes he will drink a toast to each of the five people that have meant the most to him and in his mind he tells his son their stories.

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