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RESULTSSearching enCompass books for 'Glenn Patterson'... We found 5 matches.
Glenn Patterson
Fat Lad Returning to Belfast, Drew determines not to repeat the mistake of his friend, Hugh, and get involved there again. But he is precipitated into confrontation with the ghosts of his past.
Minerva 1993 pbk £6.99 ISBN 0-7493-9890-6
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth101
Glenn Patterson
The International Set in 1967, this is a humorous depiction of Belfast at a pivotal moment in its history, seen through the eyes of a young bartender in the City's most famous hotel. Selected for World Book Day 2003 - Northern Ireland.
Anchor Books 2000 pbk £6.99 ISBN 1-86230-075-5
Glenn Patterson
Number 5 Number 5 is the story of a Belfast house viewed from the outside in. Various inhabitants live there over a 45-year period, beginning in the 1950s with the Falloon family who move in full of expectations and hope, and culminating in 1990s. It is a perceptive and gentle account of ordinary people living through one of the Belfast's most troubled times. 'Humour and the oblique view of large events from the marginal interior space that most of us inhabit give Patterson's novel a rare authenticity.' The Guardian
Hamish Hamilton 2003 pbk £9.99 ISBN 0-241-14245-8
Glenn Patterson
Once Upon a Hill: Love in Troubled Times At the heart of Once Upon a Hill are the author's grandparents, Jack and Kate, whose sedate old age belies the turmoil of their early life together, and apart - they had to wait ten years to marry. For Glenn Patterson trying to make sense of this small-town life in a family dominated by a formidable matriarch becomes a detective story written against the reluctance of surviving family members to talk and the simple erosion of memory. It becomes, too, a revelation of how much his own life - not least his own mixed marriage - has been shaped by events decades before he was born. So Once Upon a Hill is part memoir, part all-of-themoir. It is the story of what happens when history tries to squeeze itself into a town of ten thousand people, most of them related somewhere down the line. It is about the consequences of violence and the conditions required for love to survive. It is a story of frailty, fortitude, and finally forgiveness.
Bloomsbury 2008 hbk £14.99 ISBN 978-0747581604
Glenn Patterson
That Which Was Avery isn't everyone's idea of a model Presbyterian minister. A Velvet Underground fan and student of stand-up comedy, the former bank-worker can't quite get used to being 'Reverend'. Then there's his difficulty remembering biblical quotations... Despite all this, Avery has absolute faith in his ability always to know the right thing to do. Until, that is, a man appears in his east Belfast church and confesses to murder. The only problem is - this man can't remember where, when or why he killed. Avery commits himself to finding out the truth of what happened, but if this stranger seems hampered by the limitations of his own memory, then the minister's hands are tied by his professional and personal responsibilities - and, as Avery soon realizes, neglecting his own concerns could have disastrous consequences.
Hamish Hamilton 2004 hbk £16.99 ISBN 0-241-14195-8
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth101
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