The China Factory
by Mary Costello
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Description
This is a writer unafraid of the graveside, or the bedside, of filling the space of the story to the brim. Large events happen in small lives - people die, for a start, they fall in and out of love, they have children and affairs. The slow leaking of love out of a relationship is described in particular and terrible banality, as Costello's characters move about their ordinary rooms. There is a kind of immaculate suburban sadness in many of these tales.Costello's characters are lonely, show more especially when they are in a relationship. This loneliness is almost precious; it is certainly made sweeter by infidelity. Sexual betrayal is a recurring theme, not just as escape, but as transcendence.Longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
I picked this collection of short stories up in a wonderful little bookshop I found on Trinity Bar on a trip to Dublin last year, in the little 'local writers' section. I didn't hold out great hopes for it, assuming it was one of those books which is stocked just because it's local - I was wrong! What a fabulous set of stories. I was also put off by the comparison to Alice Munro (!!!) on the back cover. Come off it, an obscure Irish writer's first short story collection, and Anne Enright is comparing her to (in my opinion) one of the greatest short story writers ever?
And yet... Alice Munro she isn't...but Mary Costello definitely has something very special, and her stories do remind me of Munro's in their unflinching sparseness. They show more are beautiful...but often utterly desolate, full of loneliness and isolation hiding amidst daily life. Another thing I enjoyed here was the extent to which these stories are so deeply rooted in Ireland; Dublin is the big, faraway city, and there is the constant pull of the green hills and ocean of the west of Ireland.
Costello hasn't published anything else so far, but I'll certainly be keeping an eye out for more. show less
And yet... Alice Munro she isn't...but Mary Costello definitely has something very special, and her stories do remind me of Munro's in their unflinching sparseness. They show more are beautiful...but often utterly desolate, full of loneliness and isolation hiding amidst daily life. Another thing I enjoyed here was the extent to which these stories are so deeply rooted in Ireland; Dublin is the big, faraway city, and there is the constant pull of the green hills and ocean of the west of Ireland.
Costello hasn't published anything else so far, but I'll certainly be keeping an eye out for more. show less
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- Canonical title
- The China Factory
- Important places
- Ireland
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- 69
- Popularity
- 454,056
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (3.43)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 6
- ASINs
- 2































































