The Irish R M
By (Author) E.OE. Somerville
By (author) Martin Ross
Little, Brown Book Group
Abacus
20th November 1990
5th April 1990
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Short stories
823.8
Paperback
592
Width 124mm, Height 196mm, Spine 28mm
400g
Major Sinclair Yeates leaves England to work as an Irish Resident Magistrate convinced that two and two make four. But as he passes judgement on a range of cases and characters that would have driven Solomon to drink he learns that in Ireland, two and two are just as likely to make five, or three, or even nothing at all...
First published at the turn of the century as EXPERIENCES OF AN IRISH R.M., these stories were quickly recognised as classics of Anglo- Irish literature and as some of the funniest prose in the English language. This collection- containing all thirty-four stories- inspired the hugely successful television series.'One of the funniest books ever written about Ireland' INDEPENDENT 'A lyrical, hilarious masterpiece.' STANDARD 'Boisterous, colourful high jinks in the country.' TLS 'The achievement remains solitary, immortal, like Hamlet or The Diary of a Nobody.' OBSERVER 'Wonderfully comic.' THE TIMES
Edith Somerville and her cousin Violet Martin adopted male pseudonyms to produce one of the most celebrated literary partnerships and achieved International fame as Somerville and Ross.