The Family on Paradise Pier

The Family on Paradise Pier

Paperback (04 Apr 2005)

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Publisher's Synopsis

A stunning fictionalised portrait of a truly fascinating family, and an intimate view of a century of Irish history

`A cynic might ask what she deserves to be remembered for. She left behind no great paintings or books, descendants or political achievements, nothing one can conventionally measure. Yet throughout her life she achieved the miracle of being steadfastly true to herself. Inside her gentleness lurked a diamond that refused to change for any time or fashion. She was ahead of her time. No generation produces more than a handful of independent thinkers, existing on the fringe of things, invisible and as essential as plankton.'

This is Dermot Bolger describing Sheila Fitzgerald - a very rare and amazing Irishwoman he first met when he was a young man. Born into an aristocratic Anglo-Irish family in 1903, she died only a few years ago aged 97, after an extraordinary life that spanned almost the entire twentieth century. The trajectory of her life seems at first glance to be quite staggeringly odd, mad even - born into a privileged and rarefied world but spending her old age living in a caravan in a field in Wexford. All of this via a childhood steeped in politics and the arts, a disastrous marriage, the deaths of her 2 children & running an art school. But at the heart of this idiosyncratic life lies an absolute constant - a refusal to be anything other than herself.

From all this wonderful material, Dermot has a gift of a story for his new novel, one which spans a century of Irish history, but has at the heart of it a lovely, emotional study of an extremely unusual life, an aristocrat who defied all expectations.

Book information

ISBN: 9780007207305
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Imprint: HarperCollins Entertainment
Pub date:
Number of pages: 560
Weight: 616g
Height: 234mm
Width: 153mm