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Rating: Summary: A superb piece of storytelling as only the Dublin Irish can Review: Borstal boy is a harrowing account of life in a British Borstal institution in the 1940's. What is remarkable about this book is the absence of bitterness and the lessons which can be learned about people and life in a sheltered institution such as a borstal prison. Behan's prose style, always engaging, flows seamlessly from tenderness to savagery. However, no matter how brutal the experiences of the young Behan, his basic humanity shines through. Highly recommended!
Rating: Summary: tragicomedy about a young ira boy and his experiences Review: Borstal Boy makes me laugh out loud and also reminds me of my time in the British Royal Navy. One of the young Brendan Behan's fellow prisoners in the English young peoples' prison is a sailor named Charlie. The book shows some of the horrors of prison life but also a lot of the camaraderie that goes on whenever boys get together. Brendan Behan is very humorous, especially when writing about his court appearances, and when he's singing in prison. His descriptive language is brilliant, this from the first page, "A young one, with a blonde, Herrenvolk head and a B.B.C. accent shouted, 'I say, greb him, the bestud.' I have read this book at least four times, and will continue to be entertained by the wit and skill of the author. GREAT READ!!!
Rating: Summary: breath-takingly funny Review: I was epecting something a little more politically polemic or bleak, but this account is hysterically funny and inspired. Behan's writing is always vital, his grasp of dialogue perfect, but this novel enjoys a pacing brilliance I dared not hope from a playwright. Most dramatists have trouble with narrative prose because the rhythms are different, but not so with this account of his jail time as an adolescent in England.
Rating: Summary: breath-takingly funny Review: I was epecting something a little more politically polemic or bleak, but this account is hysterically funny and inspired. Behan's writing is always vital, his grasp of dialogue perfect, but this novel enjoys a pacing brilliance I dared not hope from a playwright. Most dramatists have trouble with narrative prose because the rhythms are different, but not so with this account of his jail time as an adolescent in England.
Rating: Summary: Brilliant one-of-a-kind memoir Review: I'm an avid reader and can't believe I overlooked this book for so long. Perhaps I dismissed Behan as a professional Irishman, known more for his carousing than for his writing. What a mistake! This memoir is profound, profane, funny and, ultimately, humane. Read this book now; you're in for a treat.
Rating: Summary: This book is BRILLIANT! Review: In the annals of Irish literature about the Troubles and personal accounts of IRA involvement, Behan's autobiographical work stands alone. The text is at once witty, engaging, hilarious, sad, and enlightening. Arrested at a young age in Liverpool with the makings of a bomb, his youth saves him from the usual grim prison sentence faced by Irish terrorists in England. Young Brendan is sent instead to borstal, a sort of English detention center for juvenile delinquents. Behan emerges from the experience a changed man with reconsidered ideas about the world in which he lives. This book is simply the most interesting account of prison life I have ever read. This text is the sort that one will return to again and again in the run of the years.
Rating: Summary: An epic page-turner Review: In the annals of Irish literature about the Troubles and personal accounts of IRA involvement, Behan's autobiographical work stands alone. The text is at once witty, engaging, hilarious, sad, and enlightening. Arrested at a young age in Liverpool with the makings of a bomb, his youth saves him from the usual grim prison sentence faced by Irish terrorists in England. Young Brendan is sent instead to borstal, a sort of English detention center for juvenile delinquents. Behan emerges from the experience a changed man with reconsidered ideas about the world in which he lives. This book is simply the most interesting account of prison life I have ever read. This text is the sort that one will return to again and again in the run of the years.
Rating: Summary: A beacon of hope about the nature of mankind Review: This autobiographical account of Brendan Behan's arrest and imprisonment from 1939 until around 1943 in a British Borstal (youth correctional facility)is an outstanding piece of literature.
There are four primary strenghts to this great work.
First, the language is witty, charming, and creative. I found the mixture of Irish and British male adolescent working class slang to be musical and amusing. Behan had a wonderful sense of dialogue and the manner in which young men verbally duel with each other, striving for rank and dominance and friendship.
Second, the story is unique. A 17 year old IRA terrorist is arrested and sent to a youth facility full of adolescent petty criminals. The worlds of incarcerated vs. free; adult vs. adolescent; Catholic vs. Protestant; Irish vs. English: and criminal vs. political prisoner are just a few of the wonderful tensions and juxtapositions that Behan creates.
Third, is Behan's slow pace and ability to observe the most remote details, describe them uniquely, and then weave these streams of images together to create a world and to populate it with characters that ring true with every word.
Fourth, the story is a tremendous testament to the goodness of mankind. Underneath the tensions, the rivalry, the ideology, the story reveals the simple common kindness of mankind. Brendan Behan may have evoked this kindness through his own exceptional openness and acceptance of his fellowman or he may have observed this kindness through this insightful but possibly biased vision of the innate goodness of mankind; but, none the less, his faith in our sometimes distorted and crippled species shines through the autobiography like a beacon of hope.
I wish I could have given more than 5 stars to this superb work. Don't rush through this book. Let Behan take you into his experiences and his kind view of the world of man.
Rating: Summary: A true definitive in Irish Prose Review: This book chronicles Brendan Behan's arrest at a young age in Liverpool for IRA activity , a brief subsequent imprisonment in a British jail cell and eventually to the time he spent in the juvenile detention center at borstal for his crime. It is a tale of the human spirit making the most amidst the confines of detention, the tawdry bigotry of dealing with the bland Irish paddy stereotype & the solitude of being a stranger alone in a foreign land. Yet Behan finds strength to make the most of it all, by using his whimsical whit to parlay his fellow inmates at borstal that ultimately earns their loyalty & friendship, his sarcastic 'bedevilment' & street wise sense that earns the respect of the guards and governor and the gift of the gab to talk himself both in and usually out of situations. The language is the most striking piece of this work. The true colloquialism of the Dublin accent, coupled with the seanachai's (old Irish story tellers) tradition of storytelling interlaced with all its pagan & christian overtones & the ability to use the English language in a rather unique Irish way ("I have him bewitched, balloxed and bewildered, for there is an art & science in taking the piss out of a screw, and I am a well trained young man at it") will enthrall the reader and provide many hours of enjoyment. This is a true definitive in Irish Prose and a classic in modern literature. Pick it up straight away.
Rating: Summary: This book is BRILLIANT! Review: This book is an oustanding account of Behan's personal experience inside an English juvenile detention facility. For readers of Irish literature, this is a perfect and brilliantly written book!
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