Stories of Ireland
By (Author) Brian Friel
Penguin Books Ltd
Penguin Books Ltd
17th June 2025
13th March 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Short stories
Narrative theme: Sense of place
Narrative theme: Identity / belonging
Paperback
192
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 12mm
146g
A collection of delightful short stories from one of Ireland's greatest ever writers, Brian Friel 'A fake! A quack! A charlatan! Get a grip on yourself, woman! We'll say another rosary and then I'll leave you home.' Stories of Ireland is a brilliant, colourful compendium of mid-century Irish experience from one of Ireland's greatest ever writers, Brian Friel. Demonstrating all of Friel's peerless instinct for voice, scene, and the uncanny mystery found in the everyday, these tales tell of beauty, struggle and discovery- from the drowning of a man in the bog-black waters of Lough Keeragh, to the camaraderie of teenage potato gathers in County Tyrone, and from the careful work of the German War Graves Commission in Glenn na fuiseog, to trawlermen's talk of sunken gold off the coast of Donegal. Selected by Friel himself, and introduced by acclaimed author Louise Kennedy, this delightful, heartful collection truly offers some of the best stories ever written.
There is a touch of spring about this collection and I find myself curiously helpless in front of them. The funny stories are a complete joy. The serious stories are concerned with the subtlest nuances of human emotions and relations which can neither be described nor directly expressed * The Irish Times *
Some of the best stories ever written. They are everything short stories should be deft, skilfully written, funny and quite often breathlessly sad -- Edna OBrien
As natural and as beautiful as you can imagine... full of vitality, full of life -- Kevin Barry, author of Night Boat to Tangier
Brian Friel (1929 - 2015) is one of Ireland's greatest ever playwrights. Over a career of more than fifty years, he published 24 plays including Faith Healer, Translations and Dancing at Lughnasa, all of which are now defining documents of Irish literature. Globally, he is one of the most beloved and frequently performed dramatists of the 20th century. Friel was also an acclaimed short story writer, publishing two renowned collections in his lifetime. He died in 2015 at home in Donegal.