Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier. Sign in or sign up for free!

Become a Readings Member. Sign in or sign up for free!

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre to view your orders, change your details, or view your lists, or sign out.

Hello Readings Member! Go to the member centre or sign out.

The Bastard Pleasure
Paperback

The Bastard Pleasure

$37.99
Sign in or become a Readings Member to add this title to your wishlist.

McGrady scrapes away at the surface truths that so many people so comfortably hide behind in order to justify their lifetimes of action and inaction, and gets at, if not definitive answers, definitive questions, that, once asked, cannot be ignored. -Louisiana State University Book Review

The universe of Sean McGrady’s fiction may be bleak, but its language is magical: I saw it was another dirty Belfast dusk with nothing by way of a pleasant sensation to entice the soul outside.
The time of tension, a brute of a time, a reminder of a particular extension, urging intuitions and direction, the time I loathed was always the time that came too quickly. One can hear in his prose the music of his homeland’s literary ancestors, but no one I know writing today can bend a concept to the point of palpability like he does. The Bastard Pleasure is Belfast noir at its mad, lyrical, metaphysical best.

–Tom Whalen

McGrady’s pitch-black coming-of-age story picks up where his debut, The Backslider, left off: Belfast, during the early 1970s; a time of fear and violence, but also, it would seem from this meticulously chronicled account, of precarious hope and occasional hilarity. For his narrator, seventeen year-old Seamus McGladdery, it is a time of self-discovery. What kind of man is he going to be, and on which side - that of the ‘fly Provo boys’ who rule the streets, or that of his Protestant forebears - will he take a stand? ‘Black Belfast’ has seldom been more sharply realized, in taut, visceral prose whose Beckettian cadences are relieved by flashes of humour. Unflinching in its depiction of a deeply troubled era in Ireland’s history, The Bastard Pleasure is no easy read, but it is a rewarding one, full of thought-provoking insights and incidental pleasures. – Christina Koning

The Bastard Pleasure is a dark novel. It concerns itself with the mystery of identity and individuation, its destruction and the brutal way in which it is reclaimed in an emerging act of intuitive will and self-affirmation, that is both obligated and free, in the circumstances, to be either good or evil - more plainly, it is about terrorism, in its concrete and seemingly incomprehensible forms, that eminently reveals existential border situations in ambiguity and contradiction.

Read More
In Shop
Out of stock
Shipping & Delivery

$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout

MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Dzanc Books
Country
United States
Date
19 November 2013
Pages
156
ISBN
9781938103551

McGrady scrapes away at the surface truths that so many people so comfortably hide behind in order to justify their lifetimes of action and inaction, and gets at, if not definitive answers, definitive questions, that, once asked, cannot be ignored. -Louisiana State University Book Review

The universe of Sean McGrady’s fiction may be bleak, but its language is magical: I saw it was another dirty Belfast dusk with nothing by way of a pleasant sensation to entice the soul outside.
The time of tension, a brute of a time, a reminder of a particular extension, urging intuitions and direction, the time I loathed was always the time that came too quickly. One can hear in his prose the music of his homeland’s literary ancestors, but no one I know writing today can bend a concept to the point of palpability like he does. The Bastard Pleasure is Belfast noir at its mad, lyrical, metaphysical best.

–Tom Whalen

McGrady’s pitch-black coming-of-age story picks up where his debut, The Backslider, left off: Belfast, during the early 1970s; a time of fear and violence, but also, it would seem from this meticulously chronicled account, of precarious hope and occasional hilarity. For his narrator, seventeen year-old Seamus McGladdery, it is a time of self-discovery. What kind of man is he going to be, and on which side - that of the ‘fly Provo boys’ who rule the streets, or that of his Protestant forebears - will he take a stand? ‘Black Belfast’ has seldom been more sharply realized, in taut, visceral prose whose Beckettian cadences are relieved by flashes of humour. Unflinching in its depiction of a deeply troubled era in Ireland’s history, The Bastard Pleasure is no easy read, but it is a rewarding one, full of thought-provoking insights and incidental pleasures. – Christina Koning

The Bastard Pleasure is a dark novel. It concerns itself with the mystery of identity and individuation, its destruction and the brutal way in which it is reclaimed in an emerging act of intuitive will and self-affirmation, that is both obligated and free, in the circumstances, to be either good or evil - more plainly, it is about terrorism, in its concrete and seemingly incomprehensible forms, that eminently reveals existential border situations in ambiguity and contradiction.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Dzanc Books
Country
United States
Date
19 November 2013
Pages
156
ISBN
9781938103551