There is something interesting and intriguing to be found on almost every page
- Rachel Cooke, Guardian
Toibin has a hawk-like eye for literary subtleties, and a generosity towards his subjects that is warm and unacademic.
The Sunday Times
Toibin has a hawk-like eye for literary subtleties, and a generosity towards his subjects that is warm and unacademic.
The Sunday Times
Full of insight and intrigue
Observer
Searching, funny, generous
Irish Times
Subtle, witty and often deeply moving
New Statesman
If there is a more brilliant writer than Tóibín working today, I don't know who that would be
- Karen Joy Fowler,
Toibin is a supple, subtle thinker, alive to hints and undertones, wary of absolute truths
New Statesman
A consistently revealing look at how writers' relationships have influenced their work
Sunday Telegraph on 'New Ways to Kill Your Mother'
A wide-ranging and enlightening study of the potentially stifling family and the individual spirit of the writer
Sunday Times on 'New Ways to Kill Your Mother'
An intimate study of three of Ireland's greatest writers from one of its best-loved contemporary voices, Colm Tóibín
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In Mad, Bad, Dangerous to Know Colm Tóibín takes three of Ireland's greatest writers - Oscar Wilde, W.B. Yeats and James Joyce - and examines their earliest influences: their fathers.
With his inimitable wit and sensitivity, Tóibín introduces us to Wilde Senior, the philandering doctor whose libel case prefigured that of his son; the elder Yeats, an impoverished artist who never finished a painting; and to John Stanislaus Joyce, the hard-drinking, storytelling father of James, who couldn't feed his own family.
This is an illuminating study of how each of these men cast a long shadow not only over the lives of their famous sons, but over the works for which they are celebrated and cherished.
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'Astonishing to read. Tóibín has a hawk-like eye for literary subtleties, and a generosity towards his subjects that is warm' Sunday Times
'Funny, exciting, illuminating, wonderful, so engaging. Tells us more than a little about our own selves along the way' Irish Times
'There is something interesting and insightful on almost every page' Observer
'Sparkling, subtle, witty and often deeply moving . . . A classic' Fintan O'Toole, New Statesman
'Scintillating, imaginative, enlightening and powerfully moving throughout' Roy Foster, Spectator