This Side of Brightness
by Colum McCann
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 122)
Read in May, 2008
Tunnels, Tragedies .....Terrific Tales......
Nathan Walker and his family are at the center of this well constructed story of hope, despair, poverty, racism and ultimately the possibility of redemption.
McCann masterfully portrays a realistic story of the lives of the men known as "Sandhogs" and the dangerous nature of their job digging tunnels under New York City.
Mixing history with metaphor and vivid language, we are taken into the bowels of the earth and ...more
Nathan Walker and his family are at the center of this well constructed story of hope, despair, poverty, racism and ultimately the possibility of redemption.
McCann masterfully portrays a realistic story of the lives of the men known as "Sandhogs" and the dangerous nature of their job digging tunnels under New York City.
Mixing history with metaphor and vivid language, we are taken into the bowels of the earth and ...more
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bookshelves:
fiction-historical,
nyc
Read in January, 2003
I saw this author at the Astor Place Barnes and Nobles in Manhattan for a reading of this novel and was inspired to pick it up. McCann's perspective as a New Yorker by way of Ireland is threaded throughout the novel. Crossing several generations of New York, the plot traces a family from the days when they built the first underwater subway tunnel connecting Manhattan to Brooklyn to modern day times(1990s). I appreciated the historical references and the neighborhood landmarks I recognized, hav...more
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Synopsis: At the turn of the century, New York's sandhogs burrowed beneath the East River, digging the tunnels that would link Brooklyn to Manhattan; many decades later, those same tunnels offer refuge to the desperate and homeless. Spanning 70 years, McCann's acclaimed novel tells the story of three generations bound to the tunnels by ill-fated loves, unintended crimes, and social taboos.
Poetic "urban saga" spanning decades seamlessly. Pretty rough going at times, but worth it f...more
Poetic "urban saga" spanning decades seamlessly. Pretty rough going at times, but worth it f...more
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Read in January, 2006
You'll never look at the New York subway the same again. Irish writer Colum McCann intertwines the story of a person who dug the tunnels for the subways, an ordinary man and a homeless man who lives in the subways. McCann is a master at writing descriptive language- you see, feel, smell and uwillingly taste the invisible underground communities that exisit under Manahattan. The research he had to do to write this must have been breathtakingly difficult yet exciting.
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Read in January, 2002
I read this novel in a Contemporary Irish Writers class. Colum McCann creates a frame narrative in which the story of the construction of the NYC subway tunnels beneath the East River--with all its danger, including an incredible disaster--is intercut with the story of a homeless man living in a long-abandoned tunnel nearly a century later. McCann is a master stylist, and his story matches his ability.
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A pretty hard knock story of three generations interconnected through the building of the Manhattan-Brooklyn tunnel. Great characters with tough lives, amazing spirit, sad times...other than the ending being so strange I really enjoyed this book I jyst grabbed off the library shelf.
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Read in June, 2006
Great story of a Homeless man in the present, and a tunnel builder in the past, working on the Battery Tunnel. The Stories converge from both sides, and The tell a story of New York, both old and present, that is very different. Well done, moving and interesting, a good read.
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TSOB is just my favorite book. Has been since 2003. If you like books about NYC where the city itself becomes a character, read this. Also good for those of you who love underground/alternative historical narratives (both fig and lit).
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bookshelves:
fiction2007
Read in August, 2007
A painful and bleak read, with distance the strength of this book shines on. One of my best reads of this year, I recommended it highly. Skilful use of the dual narrative. I never knew I could care so much about tunnels under New York.
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I read it every year. It's so good. It's about three generations of one family in Brooklyn and redemption. Not the best description I can give, I know, but a great book nonetheless. You just have to read it to see for yourself.
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Read in April, 2007
This is the one I didn't finish reading. I was in the middle of moving and in the end just wasn't hooked enough to hold onto it through the distraction. I might try to revisit it and finish it though cause the subject was good.
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After reading Dancer by McCann, i expected a good read. This book was sad and depressing, but so well written. Colum McCann is one of my favorite authors right now.
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Has a copy to sell/swap
Really awesome book about the life of sand hogs in nyc, race relations, and the underground homeless experience. Great historical perspective.
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Read in January, 2003
A good intertwining narrative. Involves the building of the NY subway tunnels and the mole people. Prose is very fine
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bookshelves:
2008
Read in January, 2008
recommended to Mew by:
sisterimapoet
enthralling...scary...sweet...sad...brilliant
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