Available Formats
Hardback, critical edition/reprint
Published: 1st December 2016
Paperback
Published: 25th September 2019
Norah Hoults Poor Women!: A Critical Edition
By (Author) Kathleen P. Costello-Sullivan
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
1st December 2016
critical edition/reprint
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Fiction
Short stories
823.912
Hardback
210
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
Irish author (Eleanor) Norah Hoult (1898-1984) travelled in prominent literary circles and corresponded actively with some of the leading Irish authors of the early twentieth century, including James Stephens, Brigid Brophy, Sean O'Casey and Sean O'Faolain. Despite her reputation and a forty-four year publishing career, Hoult's oeuvre remains surprisingly neglected. This edition seeks to rectify that critical oversight by introducing Hoult's short story collection 'Poor Women!' to a new generation of readers. Hoult is often compared to writers such as Kate O'Brien and Edna O'Brien for her representations of the oppressive facets of Catholicism. Less explored is her engagement with emotional paralysis and her detailed representations of widowhood and urban settings, inviting comparison to literary giants James Joyce and Mary Lavin. These similarities offer venues for further study.
Kathleen Costello-Sullivan is a professor and dean at Le Moyne College and a scholar of Modern Irish literature. She has previously published two book-length works, 'Mother/Country: Politics of the Personal in the Fiction of Colm Toibin' (2012) and a critical edition of J. Sheridan Le Fanu's novella 'Carmilla' (2013).