The stage is set for the telling of a story... A Dublin doctor, ruined by alcohol and card-playing, is sent to find a priest to baptise his newborn son. In a seedy lounge bar, he comes across a strange party of men accompanied by a handsome, golden-haired priest who introduces himself as God. Later the same day, in another bar, he meets a vulgar little 'contact man', carrying a briefcase and wearing rings of solid gold, who announces that he is Death. God allows the gambler three requests, two of which enable him to live a prosperous, if somewhat empty, life, and the third of which he can use to cheat Death. Based on a folk-tale from West Donegal, this is a timeless story of a gambler's soul, and a universal tale of the search for forgiveness, peace and lost innocence.
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Product Details
Weight: 262g
Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
Publication Date: 31 Aug 2010
Publisher: New Island Books
Publication City/Country: Ireland
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781848400825
About Benedict Kiely
Benedict Kiely (19192007) was born in County Tyrone on 15 August 1919 and spent his formative years in Omagh. As a teenager he felt the urge to become a writer and dreamed of the life of a scholar. He trained as a Jesuit priest but after a lengthy convalescence from a spinal ailment he decided that the religious life was not for him and he took an arts degree at University College Dublin. His first novel Land Without Stars was published in 1946 at which time he was a leader-writer on the Irish Independent. He spent almost fifteen years as literary editor of the Irish Press. Retiring from full-time journalism in the mid-1960s he became a visiting professor of creative writing at several American universities later lecturing at UCD. Kielys regular contributions to RTÉ Radios Sunday Miscellany included short talks mostly on literature and other Irish topics for over a quarter of a century between the 1970s and 1990s. It was in this capacity that his mellifluous voice became so widely known. He was the author of ten novels and six collections of short stories in addition to numerous works of non-fiction. He was awarded honorary doctorates by the National University of Ireland and Queens University Belfast. In 1996 he received the highest honour of Aosdána when he was elected a Saoi in recognition of his contribution to literature. After a short illness in early 2007 Benedict Kiely died in Dublin at the age of eighty-seven.