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Nora Webster

She herself was taken aback by her own harsh decision, at how easily she turned her back on everything she had loved, and left this house on the lane leading to the cliff for others to discover, to come in the summer and fill it with different sounds. And as she sat and gazed at the cloudy sky above the sea, she sighed. She finally allowed herself to feel how much she had lost, how much she would miss. She got out of the car and stood facing the wind.
Ireland, late 1960s. Nora Webster lives in a small town and has taken on the care of her four children following the death of her husband, whilst trying to rebuild her life. She is a woman who feels trapped by the daily grind and is looking for an opportunity to escape. Gradually, thanks to the outlet provided by music, Nora takes her first tentative steps towards a new beginning. Through the interplay of unwavering self-mastery and countless doubts, one of the most significant heroines in contemporary fiction emerges. Tenderness and humanity, the pain of loss, everyday life with its joys and sorrows, the things we say and the things we hide—all combine to create an unforgettable reading experience.
  • Author Colm Tóibín
  • Translation Athina Dimitriadou
  • Text editing Eleftheria Kopsida
  • Cover design/illustration Christos Kourtoglou
  • Pages: 448
  • ISBN: 978-960-572-094-0
  • Publication: 2015
  • Categories: Literature, eBooks, Foreign Literature

Tobin – as in his other novels – manages, through a seemingly simple story, to explore the mystery of existence and coexistence, and the changes a person undergoes when circumstances change.

– Argyro Mantoglou, bookpress.gr

"...Nora’s mourning becomes a source of joy and vindicates N. G. Pentzikis’s assertion that ‘mourning means victory and joy’..."

– Katrin Karipidou, Eφημερίδα των Συντακτών

"...Tóibín avoids facile tension and manages to maintain the right pace in the unfolding of his story, placing the emphasis on character development. The almost hypnotic effect of ‘Nora Webster’ vindicates him once again..."

– Stavros Strigkas, Popaganda

"...The female figure at the centre… As in ‘The Testament of Mary’ or the as yet untranslated ‘Brooklyn’, the focus of Colm Tóibín’s latest novel is the woman. A female character whom he has admitted bears traits of his own mother, though this does not mean that ‘Nora Webster’ is an autobiographical novel. Perhaps it is an autobiographical quest, a journey through time..."

– Aphrodite Dimopoulou, Diavasame.gr

"...Greek readers love novels from Ireland. Proof of this is the success enjoyed in our country by the books of Colm Tóibín and Anne Enright, both multi-award-winning, popular authors with a strong presence on the other side of the Atlantic as well."

– Nikos Petrou, Proto Thema

Without a trace of melodrama, with enviable sensitivity, an obsession with detail and the recording of the seemingly insignificant, she observes her heroine with sympathy yet detachment, presenting one of the most complex and fully realised female characters in contemporary fiction.

– Eugenia Boyanou, Avgi

"...Colm Tóibín offers us a sensitive, understated, thorough dissection of loss and grief. Dignity and the power of will, as well as redemptive music, adorn the novel 'Nora Webster', set in the late 1960s in the small, insular town of Enniskorthy, the author’s birthplace..."

– Giorgos-Ikaros Babasakis, LIFO

"...The pages of the book also reveal its other major protagonist, which is none other than the author’s own country. Ireland and the daily life of provincial life, its inhabitants and its untamed and captivating nature, [...] are described in a wonderful way and are among the elements that captivate the reader..."

– Librofilo, Librofilo.blogspot.gr

Colm 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.

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Nora Webster

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