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Fools of Fortune (Penguin Classics) por…
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Fools of Fortune (Penguin Classics) (1983 original; edición 2006)

por William Trevor

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6061139,475 (3.91)88
Fools of Fortuneby William Trevor - a classic early novel from one of the world's greatest writers Winner of the Whitbread Prize for Best Novel of the Year Murder and revenge during the Irish Civil War The Quintons have lived in the old house in Cork for hundreds of years. Though Anglo-Irish Protestant, they sympathize with the cause of independence and secretly fund Michael Collins' fighters. But one of their workers is an informer to the British, and when he's murdered on their land, though they know nothing of it, the Black and Tans come seeking revenge. Till now young Willy Quinton has led a pleasant, cosseted life. But the murder of his father and sisters by British soldiers brings him to a point when he can only contemplate revenge himself. He sets off for Liverpool with hatred in his heart. Will he survive? Will the cycle ever be broken? 'To my mind William Trevor's best novel and a very fine one' Graham Greene William Trevor was born in Mitchelstown, Co Cork, in 1928. He spent his childhood in Ireland and was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, but has lived in England for many years. An acknowledged master of the short-story form, he has also written many highly acclaimed novels- he has won the Whitbread Fiction Prize three times and been shortlisted for the Booker Prize four times. His most recent novel was Love and Summer(Penguin, 2010).… (más)
Miembro:Tennyson
Título:Fools of Fortune (Penguin Classics)
Autores:William Trevor
Información:Penguin Classics (2006), Edition: Reprint, Paperback
Colecciones:Tu biblioteca
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Etiquetas:Ninguno

Información de la obra

Fools of Fortune por William Trevor (1983)

  1. 00
    A Shower of Summer Days por May Sarton (wandering_star)
    wandering_star: Both books are set in Anglo-Irish country houses, both deal with family relationships and the consequences of particular actions through the generations.
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A novel set in Ireland commencing with the 1916 Uprising and its consequences for its Irish and English characters. Each chapter or section is narrated by a different character so you experience the same situation from different viewpoints.

At the crux of the plot is the burning of an English mansion with the occupants inside and some die. Willi, a young Irishman, murders the English soldier who led the soldiers who burnt the house. His fleeing to Italy to escape the Black & Tans led to the upsetting of many lives because he left so many family and friends behind who missed him.

Made into a film in 1990. ( )
  lamour | Apr 27, 2023 |
Chosen as a contribution to Cathy's Reading Ireland at 746 Books and A Year with William Trevor hosted by Kim at Reading Matters, Fools of Fortune is also a title listed in 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die. It's included — along with two others by Trevor, Felicia's Journey (1994) and The Story of Lucy Gault (2002) — as a poignant novel [that[ explores the legacy of Ireland's decolonisation, tracing the aftermath from the time of the Black and Tans through to the 1980s.
Fools of Fortune poses a world of love and devotion against their destructive opposites. [...] Trevor's view combines both Yeats' intense vision of tragic cycles with a more benevolent Chekhovian sense of a rural world in which a futile human tragicomedy is played out. [...] Trevor is a writer of wonderful economy and precise observation, whose focus is distinctly on the intimacy of his characters' relations and the local world they inhabit. (1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die, 2006 Edition, ABC Books, p.713)

I've read a fair few of Trevor's books, some reviewed here on the blog but many more from my Blytonesque binge when I discovered his work in 2004. What I've come to expect from Trevor is that he writes gently about devastating events, and he does so in his mid-career novel Fools of Fortune too.

His central character is William Quinton, just a boy when the Black and Tans kill his father and torch his ancestral home Kilneagh, killing his sisters in the fire as well. The Quintons are an Anglo-Irish family (what my mother used to call 'English people living in Ireland') but they have nationalist sympathies. They support Home Rule, and they host visits from Irish heroes such as Michael Collins. And though they had nothing to do with the murder of a returned WW1 soldier thought to be a spy for Britain, the Black and Tans' retaliation blights Willie's entire life.

In the hands of a lesser storyteller, this could have been a dreary tale. Instead, the narration by Willie in the first part of the novel brings us his memories of boyhood at Kilneagh where his father is a mill-owner and his future seems assured. There are droll stories of Willie's time at boarding school with a wonderful cast of characters including eccentric masters and irrepressible boys with mastery of the untruths that they tell to evade punishment for various misdeeds. One of these misdeeds, however, involves a former master falsely accused of wrongdoing, a drunk, who avenges himself with a pathetic insult, unseen except by the trio of mischief makers, Willie, Ring and de Courcy. In the aftermath, however, the drunk gets his revenge because his accuser is traumatised by the mockery of schoolboys. But the drunk never knows it because he's drifted away. This incident is emblematic of the bigger theme: that the aftermath of trauma persists long after the event.

Along with his exploration of revenge as part of a cycle of violence, Trevor also illuminates the issue of blame based on accusations that may or may not be false.

To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2023/03/14/fools-of-fortune-1983-by-william-trevor/ ( )
  anzlitlovers | Mar 13, 2023 |
Reason Read: Reading 1001 Oct botm
This book was written by William Trevor in 1983 and it is a historical work of fiction and starts out comparing a house in Dorset with a house in Kilneagh, England and Ireland and the backdrop is a protestant family with roots in both England and Ireland. It is about violence of terrorism and the injury to the innocent that has devastating long term effects. The style is different in that each main character does an inner dialogue with the other person, but never puts the words in a letter and never really talks with the other person. There are 3 main characters; Willie, Marianne, Imelda but the secondary characters are very important and sometimes more sympathetic than any of the 3 main characters. I had a hard time engaging with the novel. It probably was the structure and also the fact that these characters were so frustrating. I am glad I read it and I do think it deserves its place on the 1001 list. It also was the winner of the Whitbread Award for best Novel. ( )
  Kristelh | Oct 17, 2022 |
I really like Trevor's writing. The style is simple and straightforward, but the plot and characters are always deeply drawn. This novel begins during the Irish war for independence in the early 1900s and introduces a family whose house is burnt down, killing several family members, by the Black and Tans. The aftermath of this for the remaining family members is the subject of the book.

Though I really liked this, it wasn't my favorite book by William Trevor, which remains The Story of Lucy Gault. ( )
1 vota japaul22 | Jul 4, 2019 |
Willie Quinton grows up on his family’s estate, Kilneagh near Fermoy, Ireland in the 1920s safe in the knowledge he will continue to live in the manor house and one day run the mill. After an informer is found dead on the property the Black and Tans stage a vicious attack, partially burning the manor house and killing Willie’s father, sisters, and some of the staff, even the dogs.

Willie and his mother move to Cork and she never recovers from the tragedy. Willie eventually returns for a time, but the cycle of revenge continues. “The battlefield has never quietened,” as one character observes.

A masterpiece. ( )
2 vota Hagelstein | Apr 3, 2016 |
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Fools of Fortuneby William Trevor - a classic early novel from one of the world's greatest writers Winner of the Whitbread Prize for Best Novel of the Year Murder and revenge during the Irish Civil War The Quintons have lived in the old house in Cork for hundreds of years. Though Anglo-Irish Protestant, they sympathize with the cause of independence and secretly fund Michael Collins' fighters. But one of their workers is an informer to the British, and when he's murdered on their land, though they know nothing of it, the Black and Tans come seeking revenge. Till now young Willy Quinton has led a pleasant, cosseted life. But the murder of his father and sisters by British soldiers brings him to a point when he can only contemplate revenge himself. He sets off for Liverpool with hatred in his heart. Will he survive? Will the cycle ever be broken? 'To my mind William Trevor's best novel and a very fine one' Graham Greene William Trevor was born in Mitchelstown, Co Cork, in 1928. He spent his childhood in Ireland and was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, but has lived in England for many years. An acknowledged master of the short-story form, he has also written many highly acclaimed novels- he has won the Whitbread Fiction Prize three times and been shortlisted for the Booker Prize four times. His most recent novel was Love and Summer(Penguin, 2010).

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