Immagine dell'autore.

Maureen McCarthy (1) (1953–)

Autore di Queen Kat, Carmel & St Jude Get A Life

Per altri autori con il nome Maureen McCarthy, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.

22+ opere 808 membri 23 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Fonte dell'immagine: Allen and Unwin Media Centre

Serie

Opere di Maureen McCarthy

Rose by Any Other Name (2006) 135 copie
Chain Of Hearts (1999) 99 copie
Somebody's Crying (2008) 70 copie
The Convent (2012) 59 copie
Cross My Heart (1993) 50 copie
When You Wish upon a Rat (2010) 37 copie
Flash Jack (2001) 34 copie
Ganglands (1992) 29 copie
Stay With Me (2015) 20 copie
The Mona Lisa Mix-up (1993) 7 copie
The Polish Pony Puzzle (1993) 6 copie
The Falling Star (1993) 5 copie
Fatima (In Between) (1987) 2 copie
Eagles from the East (1993) 2 copie
Angie (In Between) (1987) 2 copie
Saret (1987) 2 copie

Opere correlate

The Wicked Wood (2011) — Collaboratore — 48 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1953
Sesso
female
Nazionalità
Australia
Breve biografia
Maureen McCarthy is one of Australia's most popular young adult authors. Her novels have been short listed for numerous awards, and include the bestselling book Queen Kat, Carmel and St. Jude Get a Life, which was made into a highly successful Australian mini-series.

Utenti

Discussioni

Recensioni

When You Wake and Find Me Gone (2002) is an oldie from the TBR. I bought it because Maureen McCarthy's name was familiar from her bestselling novel Queen Kat, Carmel and St Jude Get a Life (1995) which was made into a mini-series. A script-writer and novelist, she seems to write mainly YA, and the preoccupations of When You Wake and Fine Me Gone would be in that territory except that at 425 pages, it seems overlong for that market.



 

All throughout time there have been children who have had to struggle with the problem of whether it's possible to love a parent who's committed a heinous crime, but Mary McCarthy's attempt at dealing with this issue is naïve and unsatisfactory.

#SpoilerAlert

The central character, Kit, is the daughter of terrorists involved in the sectarian violence of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. She doesn't know this for much of the novel, but when she does, she never really wrestles with the horror of knowing what her parents have done. She is more preoccupied with her infatuation with a university lecturer, with her conflicted relationship with Leonie, the older sister who turns out to be her mother, and with the identity issues that flow from that.

When the novel opens, Kit is at university in the city, living in a grubby sharehouse with friends Tam and Brendan (who has Irish heritage too.) By chance she attends a lecture on terrorism and captivated as much by Sebastian the lecturer as she is by the topic of intractable international conflicts, she switches from literature to politics and also gets the lead role in a university play directed by Sebastian.

So when she gets a phone call from upcountry to tell her to come home because her sister Leonie has been involved in a car accident and may die, she refuses because she can't let down the cast of the forthcoming play. The plot makes its way through far too many pages of angst-ridden pleas from family and friends who try to make her realise that her priorities are misplaced. All of these pleas are focussed on her relationship with the possibly dying and probably brain-damaged Leonie, and not at all about her responsibility to provide loving support to her anguished family. This spectacular selfishness is justified in the novel by Kit's resentment about Leonie's on-and-off presence in her life.

Kit is not some giddy 15 year old. She is 20.

The circuit-breaker for this impasse is her older brother Johnny, the one who is studying to be a priest. It is he who breaks the news to her that Leonie is not her older sister, but her mother. Everyone else has known that she was born illegitimate in Northern Ireland, so they have all been lying to her, but no one knows who the father is.

But there are 425 pages to fill, and so by a series of fortunate events, including a benefactor to pay her expenses, Kit abandons her family in extremis and goes off to Northern Ireland to find the father she has never met.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
anzlitlovers | 3 altre recensioni | Oct 21, 2022 |
The characters were interesting, and it was easy to read, but the story just didn't grab me at any point. Felt long and plain and just not interesting enough to excite me. I learnt a little history I didn't know so that was good. (Lots of typos in this edition!)
 
Segnalato
waltandmartha | 6 altre recensioni | Dec 3, 2019 |
The characters were interesting, and it was easy to read, but the story just didn't grab me at any point. Felt long and plain and just not interesting enough to excite me. I learnt a little history I didn't know so that was good. (Lots of typos in this edition!)
 
Segnalato
waltandmartha | 6 altre recensioni | Dec 3, 2019 |
Tells the story of three generations of women whose lives have been affected in different ways by the Abbotsford Convent's historical past. Ellen, who at age four became a ward of the state living at the convent, after her father had her mother declared an unfit parent; Cecilia, Ellen’s only daughter, who at age nineteen took her vows and joined the secluded order as Sister Anunciata; and 19-year-old Peach (or Perpetua), Cecilia’s daughter adopted out at birth and as yet unaware of her heritage.
Very simily to other McCarthy books - a story about finding and accepting your past.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
dalzan | 6 altre recensioni | Jul 7, 2013 |

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Statistiche

Opere
22
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
808
Popolarità
#31,571
Voto
½ 3.6
Recensioni
23
ISBN
95
Lingue
1

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