Brooklyn
- Pages: 384
- ISBN: 978-960-572-143-5
- Publication: 2016
- Dimensions: 13,3 x 20,5 εκ.
- Categories: Literature, eBooks, Foreign Literature
"...a powerful story of dilemmas. Even those who have seen the film, thanks in part to Athina Dimitriadou’s translation, will be immersed in the atmosphere of 1950s Brooklyn and the heroine’s complex emotional relationships in Ireland."
– Bookpress"...A novel about the struggle of a young woman who, in difficult times and difficult places, tries to claim both her choices and their cost."
– Kostas Athanasiou, Epochi newspaper"...a contemporary, engaging novel that transports us to the atmosphere and flavour of a bygone era. It is no surprise that both the book and its film adaptation received favourable reviews."
– anagnostria.blogspot.gr"...A novel that walks a tightrope from beginning to end, balancing nostalgia, love, homeland, family, carefree days, innocence and coming of age."
– Kalliopi Kritikou, Huffingtonpost.grAthina Dimitriadou, on the occasion of the translation of Colm Tóibín’s book *Brooklyn*, is featured in the Book Press column and reveals the paths through which she approached the language and style of this translation.
– Bookpress"...a masterfully structured coming-of-age story and yet another ‘group portrait’ of Irish women who, through different roles, strive for social recognition and independence."
– Nikos Davetas, Kathimerini"Colm Toibin’s *Brooklyn* is a skilfully written novel about destiny and the opportunities that arise in our lives when there is no longer any chance to make the most of them."
– Xenia Georgiadou, Gynaika Magazine
"...If his aim in ‘Brooklyn’ is indeed that, ‘to sketch a portrait of sensitivity’, then Toibin achieves it perfectly."
– Marilia Papathanassiou, Eleftheria tou Typou
"...Torn between her 'homeland' (i.e. Ireland) and a new life in New York, the heroine is torn in this low-key and particularly evocative novel, superbly translated, as were the previous ones, by Athina Dimitriadou."
– Bookpress.gr"...The author is an introspective, slow-burning writer, and that is where he is at his best. It is as though he has cultivated a style that stands in stark contrast to that of his exuberant modernist forefather, James Joyce, although there are structural parallels here with one of the latter’s short stories, as Aris Berlis and Athina Dimitriadou aptly point out in the foreword. The translator’s informative monograph – an epilogue on Brooklyn – enriches the edition."
– Michalis Modinos, Ta Nea"...Colm Toibin manages, in a simple way, with a narrative that makes even the most everyday things seem magical, to successfully portray a 20-year-old girl, and that in itself is worthy of attention."
– Eva Pliakou, Kaboomzine"...Moving and imbued with subtle humour, with utterly convincing characters and a tight plot, his stories are the kind you read and don’t want to end, even though they deal with the greatest upheavals – loss, illness, uprooting."
– Stavroula Papaspyrou, Lifo.gr"...'Brooklyn' is a superb example of understated excellence. In a simple manner, Tóibín writes about the great issues of human life in an unpretentious way. He does not resort to literary flourishes; he stands on a par with his characters, observes them from close quarters, and becomes their verbal mouthpiece."
– Dionysis Marinos, fractalart.gr"Brooklyn is a story about emigration. A novel that seeks to balance the risks and opportunities of living abroad. At the same time, however, it is a coming-of-age story about a woman who experiences loss, adapts to a new culture, struggles on her own and ultimately claims the right to define her own life."
– Passe Partout Reading"...the plot is rudimentary. It serves as a springboard for Toibin to proceed with an anatomy of post-war Irish provincial society. And here, too, detail and precision are his hallmark. Always sensitive, always a lepidopterist of psychological fluctuations, Tobin delves into the innermost recesses of his heroines (the men are absent or merely decorative) and presents them to us in slow, melodic rhythms, with a slow dance of the pen."
– Giorgos-Ikaros Babasakis, BookpressColm Tóibín
Colm Tóibín was born in Ireland in 1955. He is the author of 11 novels, including The Testament of Mary (2014), Nora Webster (2015), Brooklyn (2016), A House of Names (2019) and The Magician (2023), all published by Ikaros. He has also published two collections of short stories and numerous essays. He has been shortlisted for the Booker Prize three times and has won, among others, the Costa Novel Award and the IMPAC Prize. He has been awarded the highest honour in Irish literature (Laureate for Irish Fiction) for the period 2022–2024 by the Arts Council of Ireland. He is a professor of Humanities at Columbia University. He lives in Ireland and New York.