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David Marcus (1) (1924–2009)

Author of Land Not Theirs

For other authors named David Marcus, see the disambiguation page.

41+ Works 263 Members 1 Review

About the Author

David Marcus is the author of "Irish Ghost Stories", "To Next Year in Jerusalem", and "Mothers and Daughters". (Bowker Author Biography)

Works by David Marcus

Land Not Theirs (1986) 26 copies
The Poolbeg Book of Irish Ghost Stories (1990) — Editor — 16 copies
Irish Poets, 1924-1974 (1975) — Editor — 14 copies
Irish Christmas Stories (1995) — Editor — 13 copies
The Best New Irish Short Stories 2005 (2005) — Editor — 12 copies
Irish Short Stories (1992) 11 copies
New Irish Writing (1970) — Editor — 10 copies
Phoenix Irish Short Stories 1996 (1996) — Editor — 9 copies
Irish Ghost Stories (1999) 7 copies
A land in flames (1987) 7 copies
Modern Irish stories (1972) 7 copies

Associated Works

The Midnight Court (1974) — Translator, some editions — 144 copies, 2 reviews

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Reviews

1 review
The stories in this collection are well written but in the main I was left wanting more. Not more stories but a deeper connection to the people in the ones I had just read, particularly as they are stories _about_ people, more than about ideas or adventures, for instance, so how you feel about the person is how you feel, generally, at the story's end. And I felt mostly dull.

I don't think this is necessarily anything unique to Irish writers, but reflects a tendency in so-called literary show more fiction to take a sort of dazed, distant approach to emotion and to leak away instead of resolving. This can be effective but as it is the main sense of the entire collection it leaves me feeling a bit empty at the end. A couple of stories I liked more than others, but none will linger long, I think.

The most likely to stay with me is the first story, "Time" by Seán Mac Mathúna, which studies a teacher in a prison, whose wife has left and taken their only child. I enjoyed the unfolding of Mr. Crean's interior and the strangely cloistered world around him. The movement of the story, though subtle, is distinct. I do not expect Crean to dissolve at the story's end, but to continue evolving. A good tale.
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Associated Authors

Roddy Doyle Contributor
Edna O'Brien Contributor
Colum McCann Contributor
Claire Keegan Contributor
Maeve Binchy Contributor
David Riedy Cover designer
Kozo Fukuoka Cover photo

Statistics

Works
41
Also by
1
Members
263
Popularity
#87,566
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
1
ISBNs
76
Languages
3

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