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Troubles

On sale

17th June 2010

Price: £10.99

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Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9780753829028

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WINNER OF THE 1970 BOOKER PRIZE

‘And so at the Majestic everything returned to the way it had been before. The gleaming tiles became dulled. Sofas as sleek as prize cattle lost their glow.’

1919, the Majestic Hotel in Kinalough, Ireland. Haunted war veteran Major Brendan Archer arrives to marry Angela Spencer, daughter of the house. But his fiancée is strangely altered, and her family’s fortunes have suffered a spectacular decline.

The hotel’s hundreds of rooms are disintegrating; its few remaining guests thrive on rumours and games of whist; herds of cats have taken over the Imperial Bar; bamboo shoots threaten the foundations; and piglets frolic in the squash court. And outside the order of the British Empire totters, as the violence of ‘the troubles’ mounts.

‘A work of genius’ Guardian

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Reviews

Kevin Myers, IRISH INDEPENDENT
No finer work has ever been written about this transitional period in Irish history: it remains a landmark in 20th-century Irish literature, and one that deserves to win The One And Only Great Retrospective Booker.
GUARDIAN
TROUBLES has everything: great story, compelling characters, believable dialogue and big ideas. It's a book good enough to win the Booker in any year. Not just 1970.
Simon Shaw, MAIL ON SUNDAY
Poignant, meticulously observed, often hilarious, it is one of the finest novels of the past 50 years.
John Banville
Farrell's vision and voice are unique, inimitable
Guardian
A work of genius
Tobias HIll, INDEPENDENT
Troubles stands up at every stage. It has a fine beginning and a brilliant ending, and is sustained throughout by this wit, laughter and intelligence.
Rachel Cooke, Observer
Funny, sad and beautifully written; prescient, wise, original and unexpectedly eccentric
IRISH INDEPENDENT
No finer work has ever been written about this transitional period in Irish history: it remains a landmark in 20th-century Irish literature, and one that deserves to win The One And Only Great Retrospective Booker
Mail on Sunday
One of the finest novels of the past 50 years
John Crace, GUARDIAN
Troubles has everything: great story, compelling characters, believable dialogue and big ideas. It's a book good enough to win the Booker in any year. Not just 1970.
Rachel Cooke, Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival
Like Fawlty Towers written by Evelyn Waugh
Philip Womack, DAILY TELEGRAPH
meaty and magnificent¿He [Farrell] is a master at controlling pace, and his writing is satisfyingly solid. He is capable of the most vigorous farce, and then he will bring things to the knife edge of tragedy¿a fine and fitting winner.
Rachel Cooke, Sunday Times Oxford Literary Festival, 2010
Like Fawlty Towers written by Evelyn Waugh
Sam Jordison, GUARDIAN BOOKS BLOG
'I can't praise this book enough. It's a good rule that reviewers should be forbidden from using the word "genius"...But it's hard to know what else to say when faced with a book like Troubles. There's no avoiding it. JG Farrell was a genius.'
Rachel Cooke, OBSERVER
It's funny, sad and beautifully written; it's prescient, wise, original and unexpectedly eccentric. Vote JG, I say. Or even better, just read him.