5/20/2023 0 Comments Ghost Light by Joseph O'Connor![]() ![]() I have two main objections, though:įirstly: We’re talking real people here. ![]() Many years later, Molly, now a poverty-stricken old woman, makes her way through London’s bomb-scarred city streets, alone but for a snowdrift of memories.» A young actress begins an affair with a damaged older man, the leading playwright at the theatre where she works. The synopsis from Adlibris reads: «Dublin, 1907. And, well, I think I still want to read some Joseph O’Connor, but not this book. ![]() Then the book drowned in some pile or another and resurfaced recently, so I started it. In this case, I was quite pleased, as I’ve been wanting to read Joseph O’Connor. The book was a present from my father for Christmas, a continuation of his very pleasant habit of buying us all a paperback – quite frequently he buys something he wants to read himself rather than something he has read, which is possibly riskier, but also more fun. This is not a review, so much as an explanation of why I (probably) will not finish Ghost Light by Joseph O’Connor. ![]()
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