Book description
With Escape from the Anthill, his first volume of essays, Hubert
Butler became universally acclaimed as one of Ireland's most enduring
and distinctive writers. In this long-awaited sequel he writes with
emphasis on Europe and travel in Russia, China, the Adriatic and
America during the mid-century. 'His main literary legacy ... is the
body of essays on a wide range of subjects, written over some sixty
years for newspapers and magazines ... but not gathered into book form
until 1985, when Escape from the Anthill, the first of four volumes,
was published by The Lilliput Press in Dublin. For this endeavour, the
world owes a great debt of gratitude to Lilliput's director, Antony
Farrell, whose energy and enthusiasm spurred Butler to agree to the
assembling of these wonderfully rich and stimulating collections. ...
The breadth of Butler's interests and concerns is remarkable, even for
a writer whose career spanned the greater part of this tumultuous
century ... whether he is writing about wartime atrocities or local
history, the slaughter of the Jews or Celtic hagiography, he speaks
with authenticity. In this he is a member of a dying species.' - John
Banville, The New York Review 'Like Milosz from Poland or Holub from
Czechoslovakia, Butler is a true cosmopolitan, and his writing has
something of their unruffled astringency and meditative humour.' -
John Bayley, Times Literary Supplement 'These collected essays contain
a unique distillation of the Anglo-Irish spirit, as idiosyncratic,
mellow and stimulating as poteen matured in a brandy-cask... To me,
they are all flawless gems.' - Dervla Murphy, The Irish Times 'A
writer of rare elegance and grace and with an even more rare moral and
intellectual courage. He was a literary artist of vivid and often
exquisite prose.' - Thomas Flanagan, The Washington Post