Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Photo of the Day: Peter Quinn’s Book Party, Glucksman Ireland House, NYU



This past Friday, I attended a party to celebrate the publication of Peter Quinn’s third and final installment in his Fintan Dunne trilogy, Dry Bones. The event was held at New York University's Glucksman Ireland House, an appropriate venue for Irish America’s finest scholars and writers.

The Dunne series (the earlier volumes are Hour of the Cat and The Man Who Never Returned) are detective novels set in the 20-year-period before and after WWII, and are highlighted by Quinn’s vivid descriptions, colorful dialogue, and mastery of every detail of New York as it looked, sounded, and was experienced before everything irretrievably changed.


Faithful readers of this blog realize that I’m not a subtle person. This photo of me (holding the books) with Peter proves the point. The novel’s availability now makes it an ideal time to figure it into your holiday buying plans. There’s no reason why you can’t do what I have done (and am trying, not so subliminally, to persuade you to do): buy one for yourself and another for a friend.  

(If you’re feeling especially festive, you should also look into Banished Children of Eve, Quinn’s American Book Award-winning novel of New York City on the brink of the Draft Riot in 1863--still the worst racial disturbance in American history--and Looking for Jimmy, a collection of his evocative essays on the Irish-American experience.)

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