Delivery & Return:Free shipping on all orders over $50
Estimated Delivery:7-15 days international
People:21 people viewing this product right now!
Easy Returns:Enjoy hassle-free returns within 30 days!
Payment:Secure checkout
SKU:41661713
An eminently poetic book, Langrishe, Go Down (Higgins's first novel) traces the fall of the Langrishes―a once wealthy, highly respected Irish family―through the lives of their four daughters, especially the youngest, Imogen, whose love affair with a self-centered German scholar resonates throughout the book. Their relationship, told in lush, erotic, and occasionally melancholic prose, comes to represent not only the invasion and decline of this insular family, but the decline of Ireland and Western Europe as a whole in the years preceding World War II. In the tradition of great Irish writing, Higgins's prose is a direct descendent from that of James Joyce and Samuel Beckett, and nowhere else in his mastery of the language as evident as in Langrishe, Go Down, which the Irish Times applauded as "the best Irish novel since At Swim-Two-Birds and the novels of Beckett."
doom and gloom in style.This is a very sad story, but he telling is marvellous. Short staccato sentences, disregard for continuity, and a mixture of Gaeltacht andatmospheric, classic English. You must be charmed, unless you refuse the whole beverage. Gallons are drunk, plenty of tears are shed,lies are shamelessly told and sometimes believed. Gentlewomen in distress are not a new subject, but Aidan Higgins is not interested intradition, except to rummage in forgotten drawers full of trinkets. The man is afraid of nothing, and can "do" burials and visits to graveslike no other, the life of humble persons and devotion of same to past lore, cows and heifers wandering along , the drenched fields of Ireland.All this material, so well trod in past and present Irish literature, is reworked in a high modernist garb, All things are the same, made newby a very personal attitude.