Description
From multi-award-winning author and film director Neil Jordan comes a thrilling reimagining of a turning point in Irish, American and European history.
About the Author
Neil Jordan is an Irish film director, screenwriter and author based in Dublin. His first book, Night in Tunisia, won a Somerset Maugham Award and the Guardian Fiction Prize in 1979. He is also a former winner of the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature, the Irish PEN Award, and the Kerry Group Irish Fiction Award. Jordan's films include Angel, the Academy Award-winning The Crying Game, Michael Collins and The Butcher Boy.
Reviews
A masterwork from one of the most inventive artists of our day -- John Banville
An expertly spun ballad defined by themes of belonging, illusion and, fundamentally, fidelity * RTE Culture *
Jordan is a writer of uncommon talent, particularly around pacing and visual description * Irish Times *
The historical research is evident [and] as with his previous novels, Jordan creates an evocative sense of time and place... Although the book is an odyssey, tracking thousands of miles across the globe, the pace is leisurely * The Times *
Neil Jordan is one of Ireland's greatest, if ever-so-slightly unsung, novelists * Hot Press *
The historical facts are here, in this beautiful work, laid out like a Dublin street ballad with its verses and chorus and a short afterword, containing a chapter poignantly titled 'The Greatest of These' from Corinthians 13, and Jordan doesn't seek to reinvent these men, rather to enhance them * Sunday Independent *
This panoramic, painstakingly researched novel - told through Small's voice - is a convincing reconstruction of the way their lives interlocked despite origins in diametrically opposed worlds * Irish Independent *
Creates a vivid new perspective * Sunday Times *
An atmospheric take on a fascinating friendship * The Times *
This strange relationship - of indenture, but also of mutual need - defines this thrillingly written, gripping tale that revisits many of Jordan's lifelong preoccupations with class, Irishness and sexuality to powerful moving effect * Observer *
Very little is known of Tony Small, the formerly enslaved man who was the servant and companion of Edward Fitzgerald, a prominent 18th-century figure in the cause of Irish nationalism. In The Ballad of Lord Edward and Citizen Small, the director and screenwriter Neil Jordan co-opts Tony as a narrator, giving him an affectionately acerbic perspective on the strengths and weaknesses of a man who begins the novel as a loyal member of the king's army, fighting against the American rebels. This is just one of the many dramatic episodes in Fitzgerald's short but wildly eventful life. Jordan has a wonderfully varied cast to work with. * The New York Times Book Review *
Book Information
ISBN 9781803289328
Author Neil Jordan
Format Paperback
Page Count 352
Imprint Apollo
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC