Remembering the Firebrand Irish Novelist Edna O’Brien
Her fiction delivered searing, candid portraits of Irish society through the prism of female friendship.
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Her fiction delivered searing, candid portraits of Irish society through the prism of female friendship.
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A screenwriter’s daughter, she grew up in the glittering world of privilege and its contradictions, which became rich material for her memoirs and novels.
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A Memoir That Delivers on Its Promise of ‘Sex, Drugs, and Opera’
In “Seeing Through,” the prolific composer Ricky Ian Gordon shares the heroes, monsters, obsessions and fetishes that drive his art and fuel a dizzying life.
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By Trip Gabriel
A screenwriter’s daughter, she grew up in the glittering world of privilege and its contradictions, which became rich material for her memoirs and novels.
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Her novels and short stories often explored the lives of willful women who loved men who were crass, unfaithful or already married.
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She wrote two books about multiple generations of her forebears, including her mother, Lena Horne.
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