Minggu, 22 April 2012

Young Skins, by Colin Barrett

Young Skins, by Colin Barrett

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Young Skins, by Colin Barrett

Young Skins, by Colin Barrett



Young Skins, by Colin Barrett

Ebook PDF Young Skins, by Colin Barrett

Winner of the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award

Winner of the Guardian First Book Award

Winner of the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature

A stunning introduction to a singular new voice in contemporary fiction.

Enter the small, rural town of Glanbeigh, a place whose fate took a downturn with the Celtic Tiger, a desolate spot where buffoonery and tension simmer and erupt, and booze-sodden boredom fills the corners of every pub and nightclub. Here, and in the towns beyond, the young live hard and wear the scars. Amongst them, there’s jilted Jimmy, whose best friend Tug is the terror of the town and Jimmy’s sole company in his search for the missing Clancy kid; Bat, a lovesick soul with a face like “a bowl of mashed up spuds” even before Nubbin Tansey’s boot kicked it in; and Arm, a young and desperate criminal whose destiny is shaped when he and his partner, Dympna, fail to carry out a job. In each story, a local voice delineates the grittiness of post boom Irish society. These are unforgettable characters rendered through silence, humor, and violence.

Told in Barrett’s vibrant, distinctive prose, Young Skins is an accomplished and irreverent debut from a brilliant writer.

Young Skins, by Colin Barrett

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3958487 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-09-08
  • Formats: Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.75" h x .50" w x 5.25" l,
  • Running time: 5 Hours
  • Binding: MP3 CD
Young Skins, by Colin Barrett

Review "Colin Barrett's sentences are lyrical and tough and smart, but there is something more here that makes him a really good writer. His stories are set in a familiar emotional landscape, but they give us endings that are new. What seems to be about sorrow and foreboding turns into an adventure, instead, in the tender art of the unexpected." -- Anne Enright "Language, structure, style - Colin Barrett has all the weapons at his disposal, and how, and he has an intuitive sense for what a short story is, and what it can do." -- Kevin Barry "Colin Barrett is a young man in the town of the short story, but it's fair to say he has the run of the place. This is a joyously fine collection, crackling with energy and verve, fit for the back pocket of anyone who loves a good story well told." -- Jon McGregor "Magnificent...A stunning debut... The timeless nature of each story means this collection can - and will - be read many years from now." Sunday Times (Ireland) "Incredible... Human violence, beauty, brilliance of language - this book reminds you of the massive things you can do in short fiction." -- Evie Wyld

About the Author Colin Barrett was born in 1982 and grew up in County Mayo, Ireland. In 2009 he was awarded the Penguin Ireland Prize. His stories have appeared in Stinging Fly magazine, A Public Space, Five Dials, and the New Yorker. This is his first book.


Young Skins, by Colin Barrett

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18 of 19 people found the following review helpful. A terrific new author By K. Bunker Full disclosure: I received a copy of this book in return for a review.Note: the Colin Barrett who authored this book is Irish; not to be confused with an American author of the same name who has self-published a few books.In the story "Diamonds," a man and woman in their thirties realize that they may have unknowingly crossed paths in their teenage years. "But you were there and I was there," the woman says, "In our young skins, though we didn't know each other from Adam. Strange to think of it." But in fact these people still don't "know each other from Adam"; they're two lonely alcoholics who met a few hours ago at an AA meeting and are now sharing a bottle and a one night stand. This melancholy scene, with that lovely phrase, "in our young skins," is typical of the writing in this beautiful debut collection of short stories.The setting for all these stories is small-town Ireland, and the characters are for the most part working class young men who spend a lot of time in pubs, who swear a lot, who have a history of failed relationships, and who yearn for something deeper in their lives. The plots are rather minimalist, and the characters are drawn slowly and carefully, with spare dialog and little overt introspection. But the great pleasure in this book is in the writing, which is rich and beautifully crafted. Barrett has an excellent writing "voice," with a flair for graceful sentences and colorful description. His dialog is lyrical in spite of its spareness and earthy realism (and is also thick with Irish slang -- American readers may want to refer to Urban Dictionary or some similar website from time to time).There are seven stories in this collection, and while all of them are excellent, I'd say that the highlight of the book is the longest story (at 70 pages), "Calm With Horses." Like its companions, this piece is largely a slice-of-life character portrait, in this case a portrait of an ex-boxer who now works as a bodyguard and enforcer for a small-time marijuana dealer. The character is by turns sensitive and brutal, but Barrett's writing makes him utterly believable and compelling. As the story veers into darkness and chilling violence it pulls the reader along with an irresistible force, arriving finally at an ending that's unexpectedly tender and mournful.Perhaps my second-place favorite story was "Kindly Forget My Existence," in which two middle-aged men who were friends in their youth accidentally meet in an otherwise deserted pub. They're supposed to be attending the funeral of a woman they both once loved, but out of self-described "cravenness" have crept away to the pub instead. In its understated dignity and its open question-mark of an ending, I found the story reminiscent of Hemingway at his best.Ireland has one of the richest traditions of short story writers of any nation in the world, and with this collection Collin Barrett is taking his place in that tradition.

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful. “So much of friendship is merely…the saying of nothing in place of something.” By Mary Whipple Colin Barrett, a thirty-two-year-old author from County Mayo, has already won three major prizes for this wonderful collection of short stories, his first book. Setting these in the fictional town of Glasbeigh, located near the Atlantic and “the gnarled jawbone of the coastline,” he tells the stories of “young skins” who have been born and bred and probably will always live in Glasbeigh, stories which not only ring true but come alive in surprising and often darkly humorous and ironic ways. His main characters, young men in five of the stories, and only slightly older in the last two, have the same urges and needs of all young people, but these youth are limited in their outlooks by the paucity of opportunities, and while some may have dreams, they are most often the small dreams of people who lead constricted lives.“The Clancy Kid,” which establishes the tone and the themes for the entire collection, opens in a pub, where the speaker, Jimmy Devereux is sitting with his friend Tug, whose real name is Brendan. “Brendan” was the name of Tug’s older brother who died as a thirteen-month-old toddler, and Tug “was bred in a family warped by grief, and was himself a manner of ghosteen,” never able to shed the vision in the cemetery of “the lonely blue slab with his own name etched upon it in fissured gilt.” Within brief descriptions, the author conveys important themes and ideas and sets up the conflict that will erupt in the story, though the author lets the story unfold in surprising ways that change the focus from exterior plot to a study of character.This perfect introduction shows the first of many characters dealing (or not dealing) with their lives and their environment. Most are, by nature, limited in their abilities to handle problems. “Bait,” the second story, shows two more characters, the protective and thoughtful Teddy and his cousin Matteen. As in the case of Jimmy and Tug, one character, Teddy, is the “minder” of the other, less thoughtful one. Here, however, the characters’ roles change, moving in ironic directions. Though Matteen has a real skill as a pool hustler and is able to earn money, the girls they meet have devious plans of their own. “The Moon,” a story about Val, a bouncer, and his right-hand man Boris, shows them also coming under the spell of women who have more insights into the world than they do.Fate and the accidents which occur as a result of a character’s choices, misjudgments, or lack of insight create unexpected twists in the story lines, often leading the reader to feel sympathetic to these characters even when they bring on their own disasters. “Calm with Horses,” the ninety-page novella, has two main characters, Dympna and Arm, both minor dealers in marijuana, who, like the other characters live on the edge, physically and emotionally. Here an act of fate – or miscommunication –leads to disaster and horrific violence. The final story, about two men trying to decide whether to attend the funeral of a woman they both loved provides an appropriate ending and vision of hope. Straddling the line between comedy and tragedy, Barrett creates consummately Irish characters and crises, bringing the whole collection alive.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Gritty and terrific...Bennett is a talent to be reckoned with. By Larry Hoffer I'd rate this 4.5 stars.Gritty, sometimes bleak, but full of well-developed characters and emotions, the stories in Colin Barrett's collection Young Skins are tremendously compelling and memorable.Set in the small Irish town of Glanbeigh, Barrett's stories evoke the weariness one feels when they have spent most of their life in one place, with the same people, following the same path they always have. Sometimes his characters are down on their luck, sometimes their facing a major crossroads, and sometimes they're just hoping for a little more out of life. And even when they aren't the most upstanding people (to put it mildly, in some cases), Barrett's respect for his characters makes you care about them anyway.I really enjoyed all seven stories in this collection. Some of my favorites included "Stand Your Skin," about a man whose face was damaged by someone else's act of recklessness, and how he tends to live his life on the margins; "The Moon," about a senior bouncer at a bar, whose infatuation with his boss' college-aged daughter makes him ponder a different life than he has known; "Calm with Horses," which followed Arm, the enforcer for a neighborhood drug dealer, whose life is far more complex and complicated than you'd expect; "The Clancy Kid," about a lovelorn young man and his larger-than-life best friend, who is obsessed with the kidnapping of a young boy from their neighborhood; and "Kindly Forget My Existence," in which two old friends and romantic rivals are reunited when both try to avoid a solemn occasion.While Barrett's writing style reminded me a bit of Roddy Doyle's, he has a voice all his own. I had read about this collection a number of times over the last several months, and it always had been on my to be read list, but I'm so glad I finally picked it up. These stories are rich with character, plot, and introspection, and they definitely leave you marveling. Colin Barrett may be a relative newcomer to the world of fiction, but I don't anticipate he'll be a flash in the pan given his talent.

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