Book description
J. P. Donleavy has been writing now for forty-five years and, as he
admits, an answer to the question why is ' difficult to dig out of a
long past'. Yet over these pages he author's query is largely answered
for him: he has written so much for so long because he writes so very
well. From the banks of the Seine to the streets of the Bronx, from
the stables of the Dublin Horse Show to cocktails at Claridge's, we
are transported by these collected short pieces into the singular and
spirited world of J. P. Donleavy. Bringing an uncommonly objective yet
affectionate eye to his writings on his own birthplace, America,
balancing unabashed adoration with good-humoured bewilderment in his
depiction of his heart's home, Ireland, the author presents us with a
fresh, engaging vista that could only be his own. Whether reviewing a
book on sexual exercises for women or paying homage to Yeats, the
impress is unmistakably Donleavy's. The initial publication of these
pieces in various newspapers and journals around the world gave the
author particular pleasure because he knew that he would reach people
who were not normally book readers. However, he admits that the fate
of most periodicals and newspapers is to be used to 'wrap fish, keep
vagrants warm and help light fires'. Books, on the other hand,
'preserve their pages better between covers', and with their
publication here he hopes that 'these pieces separately written over
these many years can now keep each other company'. An Author and His
Image offers a comprehensive overview of one of the most original and
incisive voices of the last half-century.