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Finbar's Hotel: A Novel
 
 

Finbar's Hotel: A Novel (Paperback)

by Dermot Bolger (Editor) "Ben Winters was looking for the minibar ..." (more)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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It calls itself a novel, but Finbar's Hotel is really more a collection of related short stories by novelists. Irish writer Dermot Bolger came up with the idea to invite six of his literary colleagues to collaborate on a tale about a decrepit Dublin Hotel on the eve of its demolition. In its prime, Finbar's was a glorious place; now, however, it's the haunt of prostitutes and thieves. A new owner plans to pull it down, but before he does, the seven authors (Bolger, Anne Enright, Joseph O'Connor, Roddy Doyle, Jennifer Johnston, Hugo Hamilton, and Colm Tóibín) imagine for it one last night. In "Benny Does Dublin" we meet Ben Winters, a fortysomething husband and father on the lam from his loving family for a single night. "He'd never been in a hotel room before. He wanted to see what staying in one was like. He was curious. All of these were right, honest answers. But why alone? Why so close to home?" "White Lies" introduces Rose and Ivy, two sisters united by love, divided by a painful secret. In "The Test" Maureen Connolly comes to Finbar's to hide from a broken heart and ends up mending it instead.

The serial novel has been tried before; what provides Finbar's Hotel with its twist is that none of the stories are signed. Bolger leaves it up to his readers to guess who's who. Those familiar with the work of these Irish novelists will enjoy the puzzle; others will still have these seven stories of love, despair, and redemption to relish. --Alix Wilber



From Publishers Weekly

The soon-to-be-demolished Dublin semi-landmark, the shabby Finbar's Hotel, is booked solid with seven of Ireland's most talented writers, each of whom tells a chapter of this ingeniously imagined novel. Readers familiar with the literary styles of Roddy Doyle, Colm Toibin, Jennifer Johnson, Hugo Hamilton, Joseph O'Connor, Anne Enright or Dermot Bolger will need to draw on their expertise to discern who wrote which episode, since no direct attribution is provided. Bolger (editor of The Vintage Book of Contemporary Irish Fiction) has masterminded this robust puzzle, and the hotel's very Irish atmosphere blooms with seven stories of nostalgia, humor and melancholy. There's a shaggy dog tale about a kidnapped cat in Room 103 and a hard-drinking Dublin man celebrating a mid-life crisis in 101 just across the hall from the already tense reunion of two sisters in 102. In 104 the night manager's reliving the hotel's shady history while confronting a guest who's checked in under an assumed name; and in 107 a paranoid art thief is worrying about how the woman next door might blow his hand off of a hot Rembrandt, while she in turn reminisces about her first love. One of the chief pleasures of this quirky book is encountering these characters from different perspectives as they intrude briefly into each other's stories. At its strongest points, the writers summon a deep sense of place, both historical and emotional. Not a conventional novel, clearly, yet the interlinked stories tenders more cumulative harmony than a conventional anthology; the heartening, garrulous Finbar's Hotel is a captivating place to check into.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Ben Winters was looking for the minibar. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Back Cover
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4.2 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Longing for love and lost memories in an old Dublin hotel., Jan 8 2004
By Themis-Athena (from somewhere between California and Germany) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Finbar's Hotel (Paperback)
It's not exactly Dublin's first address, the old Finbar's Hotel on Victoria Quay, overlooking the River Liffey and opposite the palazzo structure of Heuston (erstwhile Kingsbridge) Railway Station - but it's a place with both character and history: It has survived a fire, among its guests over the years have been some of society's more colorful personalities, its back rooms used to be infamous for their use as a secret gathering place for everyone from politicians, gardai (policemen), members of the clergy and prostitutes, and it has that particular run-down and dubious charm of a place which has seen better days once upon a time. And now it is going to be torn down, to be replaced by a modern structure by the propety's new owner. But before the staff leaves, before night manager Johnny Farrell, whose family has served the hotel's owners since the place was opened in the 1920s by old Finbar and Johnny's grandfather, James "the Count" Farrell, goes off to open a bead and breakfast in the suburbs with his wife, and before the hotel's one true human institution, Simon the porter, checks into a hospital to nurse his cancer, a group of unusual guests assembles one last time, for one of the old hotel's very last nights.

Ben Winters, the guest staying in Room 101, is arguably not the most colorful character - far from that, actually, he is a subdued, timid middle-aged gentleman who for one night has escaped the dull routine of his suburban middle class routine and is looking for a taste of city life, without even really knowing what to do with himself when he is not watching TV. ("Benny Does Dublin.")

Rose and Ivy, the sisters who share Room 102, have come together to work out past difficulties that have been haunting them ever since Rose suddenly left their Galway family home many years earlier. ("White Lies.")

Ken Brogan, the guest in Room 103, firmly believes that he can get every lady's confidence if only he wants - unfortunately, he's just had a very bad row with his girlfriend, and now he is out for revenge, and he thinks he has found the perfect object for that revenge in her cat Moggi. ("No Pets Please.")

Night manager Johnny Farrell and Simon the porter have a final encounter with the last descendant of old Finbar, Alfie FitzSimons, a cheap lowlife who used to harass Johnny when they were children, and who has returned to stay in the hotel's Room 104 for one last time; only to find that his hold over Johnny has finally worn off. ("The Night Manager.")

Maureen Connolly has recently learned that she probably has no more than another year to live, and has since made it a habit to leave her family life behind whenever she has to a doctor's appointment in the city (and sometimes, also when she doesn't have an appointment). Freed from her daily bounds and from the bounds of accountability, she then assumes made-up identities on the spot and embarks on a new adventure whenever she takes off - this time, with American tour guide Ray Dempsey in Room 105 of Finbar's Hotel. ("The Test.")

May Brannock Americanized her name when leaving Dublin for the U.S., but after having moved around in the States and finally left her last boyfriend in Albuquerque, New Mexico, she has now returned to the place which her father, a firefighter, once helped to save from the flames - and while she is staying in the hotel's Room 106, she is trying to rekindle the connection with her childhood friend Kevin. ("An Old Flame.")

And last but not least, the art thief staying in Room 107 in anticipation of his meeting with two Dutchmen who have come to Dublin to buy his latest loot, grows restless and begins to stalk the hotel's corridors and other guest rooms, thinking that he may have been followed by someone he doesn't know and cannot trust. ("Portrait of a Lady.")

"Finbar's Hotel" is a collection of short stories written by seven Irish writers: Joseph O'Connor, Anne Enright, Colm Toibin, Roddy Doyle, Jennifer Johnston, Hugo Hamilton and Dermot Bolger (who also served as the book's editor); and while the stories are loosely connected by taking up each other's motifs and personalities here and there, and all together tell the story of the old Finbar's Hotel, its staff and its last guests, each story also stands on its own and presents its own world and cast of characters. The book thus provides great samples of the writing of some of Ireland's preeminent authors; be warned, however, that the authors chose not to reveal who wrote which installment; so ultimately you're left with the choice of either leaving the mystery of authorship unsolved, or relying on your prior knowledge of their style, or on what you have heard about them otherwise, to deduce the individual chapters' authors. The project was successful enough to spark two successor volumes; "Ladies' Night at Finbar's Hotel," which finds the hotel reopened in new splendor with a new set of unusual guests (written by seven of Ireland's best-known female writers and also edited by Dermot Bolger) and "Yeats Is Dead!", a hilarious spoof on the mystery genre, unlike the two "Finbar's Hotel" volumes pretending to follow a continuous storyline (actually, it's more like a very wild zigzag course) and reuniting some of the participants of this first "Finbar's Hotel" collection with Frank McCourt and a number of other popular Irish writers. Given their diverse authorship, all three volumes necessarily share a somewhat uneven quality, and not every reader will like every chapter equally well - but overall this is a very enjoyable collection, and if you are unfamiliar with contemporary Irish literature, this is as good a starting point as any.

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4.0 out of 5 stars An experiment that works just fine, Jun 28 2003
By Peggy Vincent "author and reader" (Oakland, CA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
What a hoot! Imagine an about-to-be-demolished venerable old Dublin hotel. Imagine hallways with room numbers on the doors. Imagine the interwoven lives of the people spending the night behind those doors.
NOW: Imagine that 7 different Irish authors are each assigned a room number and told to write the stories, somehow collaborating so that the stories link loosely together as the characters meet - or don't - in the lobby, the lounge, the bar, the restaurant, whatever. And no credits are assigned to the chapters, i.e. we readers don't know which was written by, say, Roddy Doyle. So besides the book filled with stories, there's the added fun of trying to figure out who wrote what.
Terrific.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Longing for love and lost memories in an old Dublin hotel., Feb 22 2003
By Themis-Athena (from somewhere between California and Germany) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)   
It's not exactly Dublin's first address, the old Finbar's Hotel on Victoria Quay, overlooking the River Liffey and opposite the palazzo structure of Heuston (erstwhile Kingsbridge) Railway Station -- but it's a place with both character and history: It has survived a fire, among its guests over the years have been some of society's more colorful personalities, its back rooms used to be infamous for their use as a secret gathering place for everyone from politicians, gardai (policemen), members of the clergy and prostitutes, and it has that particular run-down and dubious charm of a place which has seen better days once upon a time. And now it is going to be torn down, to be replaced by a modern structure by the propety's new owner. But before the staff leaves, before night manager Johnny Farrell, whose family has served the hotel's owners since the place was opened in the 1920s by old Finbar and Johnny's grandfather, James "the Count" Farrell, goes off to open a bead and breakfast in the suburbs with his wife, and before the hotel's one true human institution, Simon the porter, checks into a hospital to nurse his cancer, a group of unusual guests assembles one last time, for one of the old hotel's very last nights.

Ben Winters, the guest staying in Room 101, is arguably not the most colorful character -- far from that, actually, he is a subdued, timid middle-aged gentleman who for one night has escaped the dull routine of his suburban middle class routine and is looking for a taste of city life, without even really knowing what to do with himself when he is not watching TV. ("Benny Does Dublin.")

Rose and Ivy, the sisters who share Room 102, have come together to work out past difficulties that have been haunting them ever since Rose suddenly left their Galway family home many years earlier. ("White Lies.")

Ken Brogan, the guest in Room 103, firmly believes that he can get every lady's confidence if only he wants -- unfortunately, hes just had a very bad row with his girlfriend, and now he is out for revenge, and he thinks he has found the perfect object for that revenge in her cat Moggi. ("No Pets Please.")

Night manager Johnny Farrell and Simon the porter have a final encounter with the last descendant of old Finbar, Alfie FitzSimons, a cheap lowlife who used to harass Johnny when they were children, and who has returned to stay in the hotel's Room 104 for one last time; only to find that his hold over Johnny has finally worn off. ("The Night Manager.")

Maureen Connolly has recently learned that she probably has no more than another year to live, and has since made it a habit to leave her family life behind whenever she has to a doctor's appointment in the city (and sometimes, also when she doesn't have an appointment). Freed from her daily bounds and from the bounds of accountability, she then assumes made-up identities on the spot and embarks on a new adventure whenever she takes off -- this time, with American tour guide Ray Dempsey in Room 105 of Finbar's Hotel. ("The Test.")

May Brannock Americanized her name when leaving Dublin for the U.S., but after having moved around in the States and finally left her last boyfriend in Albuquerque, New Mexico, she has now returned to the place which her father, a firefighter, once helped to save from the flames -- and while she is staying in the hotel's Room 106, she is trying to rekindle the connection with her childhood friend Kevin. ("An Old Flame.")

And last but not least, the art thief staying in Room 107 in anticipation of his meeting with two Dutchmen who have come to Dublin to buy his latest loot, grows restless and begins to stalk the hotel's corridors and other guest rooms, thinking that he may have been followed by someone he doesn't know and cannot trust. ("Portrait of a Lady.")

"Finbar's Hotel" is a collection of short stories written by seven Irish writers: Joseph O'Connor, Anne Enright, Colm Toibin, Roddy Doyle, Jennifer Johnston, Hugo Hamilton and Dermot Bolger (who also served as the book's editor); and while the stories are loosely connected by taking up each other's motifs and personalities here and there, and all together tell the story of the old Finbar's Hotel, its staff and its last guests, each story also stands on its own and presents its own world and cast of characters. The book thus provides great samples of the writing of some of Ireland's preeminent authors; be warned, however, that the authors chose not to reveal who wrote which installment; so ultimately you're left with the choice of either leaving the mystery of authorship unsolved, or relying on your prior knowledge of their style, or on what you have heard about them otherwise, to deduce the individual chapters' authors. The project was successful enough to spark two successor volumes; "Ladies' Night at Finbar's Hotel," which finds the hotel reopened in new splendor with a new set of unusual guests (written by seven of Ireland's best-known female writers and also edited by Dermot Bolger) and "Yeats Is Dead!", a hilarious spoof on the mystery genre, unlike the two "Finbar's Hotel" volumes pretending to follow a continuous storyline (actually, it's more like a very wild zigzag course) and reuniting some of the participants of this first "Finbar's Hotel" collection with Frank McCourt and a number of other popular Irish writers. Given their diverse authorship, all three volumes necessarily share a somewhat uneven quality, and not every reader will like every chapter equally well -- but overall this is a very enjoyable collection, and if you are unfamiliar with contemporary Irish literature, this is as good a starting point as any.
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No (Report this)


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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Longing for love and lost memories in an old Dublin hotel.
It's not exactly Dublin's first address, the old Finbar's Hotel on Victoria Quay, overlooking the River Liffey and opposite the palazzo structure of Heuston (erstwhile... Read more
Published on Feb 18 2003 by Themis-Athena

3.0 out of 5 stars A good 'novelty' book
Basically each story begins with a character checking into a room. We get to observe them for a while and they eventually meet and interact with another character, then a kind of... Read more
Published on Oct 25 2001 by jaldrin32

3.0 out of 5 stars A Concept That Doesn't Quite Make It
After having heard a lot about this book, and read a number of reviews, I read this with much anticipation. I was sadly let down. Read more
Published on Jul 4 2000 by Elliott Campbell

4.0 out of 5 stars A Fun Intro to Mod Irish Writers
In the tradition (but not awful quality) of the movie Four Rooms, editor Bolger brings together six of Ireland's top authors to each tell the tale of one room and the... Read more
Published on Mar 28 2000 by A. Ross

5.0 out of 5 stars more more more
After burning out on the "woman overcoming adversity" novels, the "young boy in the south" novels (complete with quirky characters and "side... Read more
Published on Sep 7 1999 by K. L. Cotugno

5.0 out of 5 stars AN EASY AND FUN READ
I picked this book up as an American who only knew Roddy Doyle's work. Now I want to read all the other authors because they all are amazing writers. Read more
Published on Mar 8 1999

5.0 out of 5 stars An entertaining and complex book; excellent.
Seven inter-linked short stories, set in the same fictitious hotel on the quays in Dublin. The stories range from the out-right funny to the somewhat disturbing. Read more
Published on Dec 14 1998

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