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Ripley Bogle (Ballantine Reader's Circle)
 
 
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Ripley Bogle (Ballantine Reader's Circle) (Paperback)

by Robert Mcliam Wilson (Author) "Thank you. I seem to be spending increasing amounts of my time in thinking about my birth..." (more)
Key Phrases: other tramps, Ripley Bogle, Martin Malone, Turf Lodge (more...)
4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Eureka Street: A Novel of Ireland Like No Other by Robert Mclaim Wilson

Ripley Bogle (Ballantine Reader's Circle) Eureka Street: A Novel of Ireland Like No Other
Price For Both: $27.30

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
"I am twenty-one years old, my name is Ripley Bogle and my occupations are starving, freezing, and weeping hysterically." So announces the eponymous narrator of this alternately hilarious and horrifying novel by the Irish writer Robert McLiam Wilson, author of Eureka Street. Ripley Bogle is a Cambridge dropout from Northern Ireland who's fallen down on his luck. Having alienated everyone he knows--seemingly including the entire population of Cambridge--he disrupts an old girlfriend's wedding, attacks his landlord, and finds himself unceremoniously chucked out onto the street. The narrative follows this handsome vagrant for four chilly June days while he wanders London, ranting and reminiscing in heady stream-of-consciousness prose. Reared amid the poverty and violence of Belfast, Bogle doesn't have a kind word for anyone or anything, including his family ("the usual cast list of subhuman Gaelic scumbuckets") and his countrymen ("As a people we're a shambles; as a nation--a disgrace; as a culture we're a bore ... individually we're often repellent"). What he does have is a great Joycean roar of a voice and a prodigious talent for self-destruction. Bogle can try the reader's patience: some of his tirades read like tragicomic howls of pain, others like pure postadolescent gross-out. The novel's end takes a still nastier turn; even after Bogle's unrelentingly grim portrait of life on the London streets, his concluding confessions manage to shock. Ugliness aside, the sheer wattage of Wilson's prose carries the day, and his narrative has all the momentum--and the queasy fascination--of a car accident in progress. --Mary Park --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Publishers Weekly
Winner of Britain's Betty Trask Prize, this first novel by a 26-year-old Belfast native is both a delight and a letdown. The eponymous narrator is a decrepit young vagrant who wanders the Dickensian night streets of contemporary London as he spouts this tale to You, the reader. His story, which parallels the author's history in some ways, explains his current circumstances. A