Bottom Line: The first time I read Edna O’Brien’s https://www.amazon.com/Country-Girls-Trilogy-Epilogue/dp/0452263948/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1495590030&sr=1-1&keywords=country+girls+trilogy+edna+obrien was several decades ago. I read it again more recently along with another of her novels and some short stories. I wanted to be refreshed on the work of a woman who had given me entre into the world of Ireland and women and left me feeling like I had experienced a time and place unknown to me. I find her memoirs lend the suspicion that her fiction was mostly her autobiography only better organized and written. Country Girl, A Memoir is a definite read for her fans, but I am not sure who else will like it.
Ms O’Brien’s lack of interest in writing this book is clear. Being a memoir it need not be any of the things a biography should be. Sequential, based on fact, complete all not here or not consistently. We do get what seems like her honest point of view about herself and her first husband, but the rest of her people who matter come in and out of focus or have their names obscured. For example there is a second husband, I think or maybe three, she is not as exacting in tell about her loves as the failed love that produced her children.
That we only get her side of that first marriage is understandable. I am not certain that she intended for his every negative prediction about how Ms O’Brien would live and raise her kids would prove true. Not to give away too much, she admits to a hedonistic lifestyle, it was the 1960’s after all, and the kids are sent away to British Boarding schools. Her version of herself is better than these two facts suggest but for years at a time we read little of substance about her kids, and almost nothing about who they became as adults.
The writing itself is in the school of assemble pieces as they emerge from a fog. Detailed set ups that trail into incomplete finishes. Too many famous names with too many of them passing by rather than listed for a reason. She will form friendships with many unlikely people including at least one I will not mention hoping to surprise you as it did me.
Having finished Country Girls, I can say that the person rather than the events are informative about O’Brien’s inner self. I tend to believe she is telling us her truth, warts and all. I am not sure but that you would know her better from her fiction.
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Country Girl: A Memoir (Back Bay Readers' Pick) Paperback – Illustrated, May 6, 2014
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Edna O'Brien
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Edna O'Brien
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Print length384 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherBack Bay Books
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Publication dateMay 6, 2014
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Dimensions5.5 x 1.75 x 8.25 inches
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ISBN-100316122718
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ISBN-13978-0316122719
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Editorial Reviews
Review
Praise for Country Girl
"Ms. O'Brien has long and correctly been recognized as among the greatest Irish writers of the 20th century. She's had an outsize life to match her outsize talent."--Dwight Garner, New York Times
"O'Brien's account of her life is completely irresistible."--Kate Tuttle, Boston Globe
"O'Brien's religion has been literature; to it she has remained devout, with a fervor that is contagious...She is no saint. She is an icon."--Stacy Schiff, New York Times Book Review
"In prose as lyrical and exacting as any in O'Brien's fiction, Country Girl evokes both the solitariness and the adventure of a life devoted to writing."--Megan O'Grady, Vogue
"Edna O'Brien has made of her memories something of both precision and depth, a book that, letting us see her as she was, jumps with an all-consuming curiosity from one lucidly narrated event to another."--Philip Roth
"In Country Girl there is great honesty and struggle, and joy and sorrow leaping together--pure life!"--Alice Munro
"You must suffer to become yourself, and it doesn't get easier. I took heart from Country Girl, both as the self-portrait of a great prose stylist, and an exemplary female survivor."--Judith Thurman, "Best Books of 2012," The New Yorker
"Flashes of prodigious beauty and power."--Hilary Mantel
"The doyenne of contemporary Irish letters did not enjoy a straight-line rise to international fame and critical regard. . .Now, of course, O'Brien's fiction (brilliant short stories as well as novels) is seen for what it always was, richly illuminating and, yes, candid depictions of women's needs and desires, rendered with no sentimentality or salaciousness. . . .Her book is a beautifully expressed testament to a writer's tenacity."-Brad Hooper, Booklist (starred review)
"Demure reflections on her celebrated literary life well lived comprise this lovely memoir....O'Brien always returns to the enduring heart of her writing."-Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Country Girl is a book of magics, truths, stories, and quiet immensity. No one else could have written it, and no one else could have lived it."-Andrew O'Hagan, author of Be Near Me
"Get ready to applaud, ladies and gentlemen, because there is no one like her. O'Brien, in her 80s, may look like an icon and talk like an icon, but she writes like the thing itself, with prose that is scrupulous and lyrical, beautiful and exact...."-Anne Enright, Guardian (UK)
"When sex fails you, there's always gossip. An excellent memoir, Country Girl provided it in shedloads, along with some moral seriousness to boot."-Louise Doughty, Observer (UK)
"Edna O'Brien's Country Girl shimmers with heart, soul and literary brilliance."-Nancy R. Ives, Library Journal
"After dazzling readers and reviewers around the world for decades, O'Brien, now 82, finally turns her attention to her own life. Country Girl is as dramatic as any novel."-O, the Oprah Magazine
"O'Brien is skilled at snatching triumph from melancholy....Thrilling, sensuous, unblinking."-Lisa Shea, Elle
"Edna O'Brien had to exile herself, like Joyce and Beckett, to become herself. Mad Ireland hurt her into prose the way Auden said it had hurt Yeats into poetry....Literature-O'Brien's most faithful companion, her deepest faith-brings what consolation it can. She returns the favor by adding her extravagant lyricism to its trove."-Charles McNulty, Los Angeles Times
"A wonderful, lively memoir."-Katie Roiphe, Slate.com
"Edna O'Brien, for whom the word 'redoubtable' may well have been coined, has lived a long and quite remarkable life...Anyone who knows and loves her work, as I do, will want to read Country Girl from start to finish."-Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post
"We follow O'Brien through convent school, love affairs, motherhood, the banning of her books, and her working years in London and New York. Along the way, we encounter Günter Gras, Joseph Brodsky, Jackie Onassis, and other luminaries. O'Brien beautifully renders her remarkably rich life, her 'many me's.'"-The New Yorker
"This is a big, robust life, and though one might come for the literary gossip, the lucid prose and sharp insight command one's attention. It's with good reason that this memoir has been placed on so many lists of best books of 2013...We're in the thrall of one of the most beguiling and resilient contemporary writers, a stylist and a survivor...through it all, she's an exuberant literary pioneer." -Elizabeth Taylor, Chicago Tribune (Editor's Choice)
"Ms. O'Brien has long and correctly been recognized as among the greatest Irish writers of the 20th century. She's had an outsize life to match her outsize talent."--Dwight Garner, New York Times
"O'Brien's account of her life is completely irresistible."--Kate Tuttle, Boston Globe
"O'Brien's religion has been literature; to it she has remained devout, with a fervor that is contagious...She is no saint. She is an icon."--Stacy Schiff, New York Times Book Review
"In prose as lyrical and exacting as any in O'Brien's fiction, Country Girl evokes both the solitariness and the adventure of a life devoted to writing."--Megan O'Grady, Vogue
"Edna O'Brien has made of her memories something of both precision and depth, a book that, letting us see her as she was, jumps with an all-consuming curiosity from one lucidly narrated event to another."--Philip Roth
"In Country Girl there is great honesty and struggle, and joy and sorrow leaping together--pure life!"--Alice Munro
"You must suffer to become yourself, and it doesn't get easier. I took heart from Country Girl, both as the self-portrait of a great prose stylist, and an exemplary female survivor."--Judith Thurman, "Best Books of 2012," The New Yorker
"Flashes of prodigious beauty and power."--Hilary Mantel
"The doyenne of contemporary Irish letters did not enjoy a straight-line rise to international fame and critical regard. . .Now, of course, O'Brien's fiction (brilliant short stories as well as novels) is seen for what it always was, richly illuminating and, yes, candid depictions of women's needs and desires, rendered with no sentimentality or salaciousness. . . .Her book is a beautifully expressed testament to a writer's tenacity."-Brad Hooper, Booklist (starred review)
"Demure reflections on her celebrated literary life well lived comprise this lovely memoir....O'Brien always returns to the enduring heart of her writing."-Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Country Girl is a book of magics, truths, stories, and quiet immensity. No one else could have written it, and no one else could have lived it."-Andrew O'Hagan, author of Be Near Me
"Get ready to applaud, ladies and gentlemen, because there is no one like her. O'Brien, in her 80s, may look like an icon and talk like an icon, but she writes like the thing itself, with prose that is scrupulous and lyrical, beautiful and exact...."-Anne Enright, Guardian (UK)
"When sex fails you, there's always gossip. An excellent memoir, Country Girl provided it in shedloads, along with some moral seriousness to boot."-Louise Doughty, Observer (UK)
"Edna O'Brien's Country Girl shimmers with heart, soul and literary brilliance."-Nancy R. Ives, Library Journal
"After dazzling readers and reviewers around the world for decades, O'Brien, now 82, finally turns her attention to her own life. Country Girl is as dramatic as any novel."-O, the Oprah Magazine
"O'Brien is skilled at snatching triumph from melancholy....Thrilling, sensuous, unblinking."-Lisa Shea, Elle
"Edna O'Brien had to exile herself, like Joyce and Beckett, to become herself. Mad Ireland hurt her into prose the way Auden said it had hurt Yeats into poetry....Literature-O'Brien's most faithful companion, her deepest faith-brings what consolation it can. She returns the favor by adding her extravagant lyricism to its trove."-Charles McNulty, Los Angeles Times
"A wonderful, lively memoir."-Katie Roiphe, Slate.com
"Edna O'Brien, for whom the word 'redoubtable' may well have been coined, has lived a long and quite remarkable life...Anyone who knows and loves her work, as I do, will want to read Country Girl from start to finish."-Jonathan Yardley, Washington Post
"We follow O'Brien through convent school, love affairs, motherhood, the banning of her books, and her working years in London and New York. Along the way, we encounter Günter Gras, Joseph Brodsky, Jackie Onassis, and other luminaries. O'Brien beautifully renders her remarkably rich life, her 'many me's.'"-The New Yorker
"This is a big, robust life, and though one might come for the literary gossip, the lucid prose and sharp insight command one's attention. It's with good reason that this memoir has been placed on so many lists of best books of 2013...We're in the thrall of one of the most beguiling and resilient contemporary writers, a stylist and a survivor...through it all, she's an exuberant literary pioneer." -Elizabeth Taylor, Chicago Tribune (Editor's Choice)
About the Author
Edna O'Brien is the author of The Country Girls trilogy, The Light of Evening, The Love Object, and many other acclaimed books. Born and raised in the west of Ireland, O'Brien has lived in London for many years.
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Product details
- Publisher : Back Bay Books; Illustrated edition (May 6, 2014)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0316122718
- ISBN-13 : 978-0316122719
- Item Weight : 12 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1.75 x 8.25 inches
-
Best Sellers Rank:
#154,604 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #821 in Author Biographies
- #2,378 in Women's Biographies
- #7,396 in Memoirs (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
292 global ratings
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Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2017
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Reviewed in the United States on June 13, 2017
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Edna O'Brien has led an interesting, if sometimes chaotic, life. For those who lived through the 50s. 60s and 70s, especially if you have lived in Ireland during the struggles of the IRA, this book is an added piece of that history. She is a great writer and keeps your interest in her personal tales by not going on too long about any one subject. Her memoir also illustrates how far women have come in their journey to be treated equal to men and to be allowed a say in their own fates, whatever they may be.
6 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 25, 2017
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I saw her picture and a short article about Edna O'Brien in a magazine at the VA Hospital..
I read this book and am now hooked on her.. Even though I am a guy, this book blew me away
with vivid descriptions of Ireland and other place she has lived.. Make me want to go and visit
Ireland meet the people!
I read this book and am now hooked on her.. Even though I am a guy, this book blew me away
with vivid descriptions of Ireland and other place she has lived.. Make me want to go and visit
Ireland meet the people!
8 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2019
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I think it is an unequivocal masterpiece.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2017
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Having read O'Brien's "The Little Red Shoes" as our book club read for Feb '17 and following with several online reviews and links to some of her recent articles, I decided to read her autobiography. Both were similar with interesting, engaging beginnings but ending with many seemingly unrelated divergent stories. I had hoped to find a linear description of her development as a writer, but her story jumped around with little focus on writing but lots of name dropping - too often without any context as to why they were relevant to her life story. But no doubt she was popular as an intelligent, attractive single woman. Her recollection that the first books flowed easily from her experience affirms this reader's belief that nearly everyone has a compelling story to share. Her long career as a writer with lots of ups and downs colored by celebrity and travels while never quite finding Mr. Right reflects the reality that the interesting life is not always one that is safe, secure, and without emotional or financial turmoil. On this St. Patrick's Day, I toast Edna O'Brien as a fine example of female independence! Put that in your pipe and smoke it!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2021
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I purchased this book as it said that it was a brand new” book. But when it arrived, even though it had a compact plastic seal wrapped over it, when I opened it, there were pencil marks in the pages. Attaching a few photos. It’s not a big deal, but this is definitely not a brand new book.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not a new book.
By rjkg on April 12, 2021
I purchased this book as it said that it was a brand new” book. But when it arrived, even though it had a compact plastic seal wrapped over it, when I opened it, there were pencil marks in the pages. Attaching a few photos. It’s not a big deal, but this is definitely not a brand new book.
By rjkg on April 12, 2021
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Reviewed in the United States on May 11, 2013
Verified Purchase
This memoir seethes with life, an abundant life lived by a still vibrant Edna O'Brien.
I really can't fault this memoir. Truly, it's wonderful; her sumptuous way with words ( She has a tremendous vocabulary.) magnifies a sumptuous life filled with memories from Ireland to Singapore. By the way, O'Brien never complains or seems testy as we follow her glories and her travails-- from being a "country girl" to becoming a sophisticated author and a globally known personality.
We read about her family, her schooling in Ireland, her first romance (a same sex crush), her escape from convent life ( and a pharmacist's shop life) into the arms of her husband, who turns out to offer a tyranny of sorts ( He's treated rather generously, I think, in this telling). We get fantastic descriptions of her homes ( temporary and not) and their environs. We hear her guilt about being separated from her young boys. We suffer- a bit- with her when she has writer's block. We share her multitudinous friends and acquaintances ( many of them authors) with her. Many lovers, too; this is an important part of who she is. ( Some reviewers say that O'Brien name-drops a lot. I don't feel that this is the case. She describes these people,of course, as part of her life, which is full, but not in a way that appears to be bragging. Not pompously at all. Just part of who she is.)
The author is a product of her ( our) times but more than that. The times as seen through her eyes are lush and sparkle with the life she's lived and is living . One of the best memoirs I've read recently.
I really can't fault this memoir. Truly, it's wonderful; her sumptuous way with words ( She has a tremendous vocabulary.) magnifies a sumptuous life filled with memories from Ireland to Singapore. By the way, O'Brien never complains or seems testy as we follow her glories and her travails-- from being a "country girl" to becoming a sophisticated author and a globally known personality.
We read about her family, her schooling in Ireland, her first romance (a same sex crush), her escape from convent life ( and a pharmacist's shop life) into the arms of her husband, who turns out to offer a tyranny of sorts ( He's treated rather generously, I think, in this telling). We get fantastic descriptions of her homes ( temporary and not) and their environs. We hear her guilt about being separated from her young boys. We suffer- a bit- with her when she has writer's block. We share her multitudinous friends and acquaintances ( many of them authors) with her. Many lovers, too; this is an important part of who she is. ( Some reviewers say that O'Brien name-drops a lot. I don't feel that this is the case. She describes these people,of course, as part of her life, which is full, but not in a way that appears to be bragging. Not pompously at all. Just part of who she is.)
The author is a product of her ( our) times but more than that. The times as seen through her eyes are lush and sparkle with the life she's lived and is living . One of the best memoirs I've read recently.
56 people found this helpful
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DaisyReadsLots
4.0 out of 5 stars
Beautifully written.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 22, 2018Verified Purchase
I'm a big fan of Edna O'Brien's writing and her Country Girls trilogy really spoke to me when I read it in my twenties. I was excited about reading this memoir and the first half of the book is wonderful. I loved the descriptions of her childhood in County Clare and her beautiful house in Carlyle Square in Chelsea and the parties she held there. However, the latter half of the book wasn't as appealing. I didn't like the New York chapter at all and as others have said in their reviews, there is far too much name dropping with few interesting anecdotes. I enjoyed the chapter, Donegal, in which Edna searches for the perfect house. The saga of The Pink House is interesting and reveals a lot about Edna O'Brien, the woman as well as the writer. The wildness of the landscape was too overwhelming and she couldn't write there. All in all, a good read and beautiful prose.
5 people found this helpful
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Patricia Fawcett
3.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful in parts...
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 8, 2012Verified Purchase
I enjoyed the early parts of the book, the reminiscences about O'Brien's childhood, the conflict of being a young woman ahead of her time, incurring the wrath of her family, the church and Irish rural society. The later parts were a little vague at times, as if the writer, having decided, under pressure, to finally write her autobiography, was reluctant to do so. She certainly does not lay her emotions bare before us, or to share an in-depth view of her take on life. It might have been better for O'Brien to have written another novel instead. I am going back to re-read her earlier work.
23 people found this helpful
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Elizabeth C. Nichols
5.0 out of 5 stars
Country girl ......
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 11, 2012Verified Purchase
i have waited eagerly for this book to be published, I consider Edna o'brien to be an exemplary writer who is responsible for my love of literature. she tells her story, of her life, with honesty and vividness and to read it has been a joy. She writes with such depth and from the soul. you follow her through chapters of her school days, home life, first feelings of love and can see how through observations of others and of nature, how her descriptions come alive. I think Edna lives in the present, in the true sense of the word, not many people observe to the degree of awakening the senses. She remains true to herself and a gift to the reader.
28 people found this helpful
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Simon Cooper
3.0 out of 5 stars
Leave them wanting more?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 14, 2013Verified Purchase
I am one of Edna O'Brien's biggest fans. I have read nearly everything she's written. I was very much looking forward to this memoir, which is listed somewhere on Amazon as "Autobiography".
It is not. Since it is by Ms. O'Brien, it is exquisitely written, but it does not deliver what it promises. She is wonderful at writing about Ireland and her childhood and the escape from her own country that launched her in England, then the World. But the rest.... oh my.... it did feel as if her agent was holding a gun to her head and demanding "Tell us a bit about your love affairs, the famous people you knew.... the gossip.....!!!"
So she ekes out a tiny taste of the end of a love affair, the friendship with Jackie Onassis, the near love affair with Marlon Brando, but not nearly enough to satisfy one's genuine curiosity.
This is like a trailer for an autobiography, and it is very disappointing indeed.I finished it a very dissatisfied admirer of Edna O'Brien.
It is not. Since it is by Ms. O'Brien, it is exquisitely written, but it does not deliver what it promises. She is wonderful at writing about Ireland and her childhood and the escape from her own country that launched her in England, then the World. But the rest.... oh my.... it did feel as if her agent was holding a gun to her head and demanding "Tell us a bit about your love affairs, the famous people you knew.... the gossip.....!!!"
So she ekes out a tiny taste of the end of a love affair, the friendship with Jackie Onassis, the near love affair with Marlon Brando, but not nearly enough to satisfy one's genuine curiosity.
This is like a trailer for an autobiography, and it is very disappointing indeed.I finished it a very dissatisfied admirer of Edna O'Brien.
One person found this helpful
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Musicfan
4.0 out of 5 stars
Memoir of a writer who helped define the Sixties
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 23, 2013Verified Purchase
I don't think I read any of Edna O'Brien's books as I was growing up in the 60's, but I was certainly aware of her and knew that she was often controversial. When I heard that she had written a memoir, I decided to download it to see what she had made of her life. The book offers insights into her Irish childhood, her burgeoning literary career, and her marital troubles. I'd forgotten that she'd also written film scripts. She name-drops quite a few celebrities that she met in the arts scene, and you realize that she was definitely a part of the Swinging Sixties. She writes in a typically lyrical and evocative way, so that you feel you are in those landscapes with her. I think the memoir is also interesting for what it leaves out - Edna O'Brien has been very selective about what she tells us, and she leaves it to us to read between the lines. An interesting account of an era when so many things changed...
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