The Leavetaking
Widely considered one of the greatest Irish writers by readers and critics alike, John McGahern has been called "arguably the most important Irish novelist since Samuel Beckett" (<I>The Guardian</I>) whose "spare but luminous prose" (<I>Chicago Tribune</I>) is frequently compared to that of James Joyce. In <I>The Leavetaking</I>, McGahern presents a crucial, cathartic day in the life of a young Catholic schoolteacher who, along with his new wife, returns to Ireland after a year’s sabbatical in London. Moving from the earliest memories of both characters into the present day, <I>The Leavetaking</I> recounts the couple’s struggle to overcome the suffocating influence of the church in order to find happiness in a fulfilling adult love.