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Hardcover The Informer Book

ISBN: 1025239768

ISBN13: 9781025239767

The Informer

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

"The informer" by acclaimed author Liam O'Flaherty is a gripping work of literature set against the turbulent backdrop of Dublin, Ireland. This powerful novel plunges readers into a world of intense suspense, where the stakes are life and death, and loyalty is a dangerous commodity.

At its heart, "The informer" explores the perilous depths of betrayal and the insidious nature of political intrigue. The story masterfully navigates the tense landscape where individuals are caught between their convictions and the desperate struggle for survival, often involving the shadowy role of informers. O'Flaherty crafts a narrative rich with moral complexity, drawing readers into a relentless cycle of suspicion and fear as lives hang in the balance.

As a seminal work of suspense fiction, this book offers an unvarnished look at the human cost of conflict and the profound impact of divided loyalties. It stands as a compelling testament to the enduring power of classic storytelling, its themes of trust, treachery, and the fight for freedom resonating deeply. "The informer" remains a captivating and thought-provoking exploration of a volatile era, firmly establishing its place within literary crime and suspense.

This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.

This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.

Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The Informer

A great book! A twelve hour window into 1920s Dublin, it follows an informer that get tattles and gets his 'friend' killed.

Fenian Hulk Finks on Friend, Fatally Fails to Flee

In the confused political situation in Ireland between 1916 and 1925, all kinds of ideologies competed, common criminals took up party work only to revert to their original callings. Leaders were betrayed, assassinated, jailed. The long dream of independence came to life, but in a fog of disappointment and disillusion. When the dust settled, all the brilliant men lay dead. O'Flaherty has set his novel in the politico-criminal underworld of this period, with a large dollop of that disillusion. Nobody comes out smelling like a rose. Gypo Nolan, the main character, harbors great physical strength, but little brain. Unlike most protagonists, he thinks little. The author describes his feelings or changes of mood, an interesting tack to take. Gypo informs on a former colleague in the Party, who is promptly surrounded by the police and gets shot dead during the standoff. With his 20 pound reward burning a hole in his pocket ( it might have been equivalent to about 20 weeks pay for a worker), Gypo treats a crowd to fish and chips, then drinks, fights, and whores, giving a big part of his loot away to a sad woman he meets by chance. The Party suspects Gypo, who fingers an innocent man. At the subsequent "trial", the truth comes out. Gypo is locked up, but escapes. The denouement is not long in coming. THE INFORMER is fast paced, highly descriptive. I felt that sometimes the urge to describe everyone and everything in detail got the better of the author, his descriptive style began to resemble a Thomas Hart Benton mural, with each individual a caricature of a `type' or a `stock character'. The "firm jaws", the "mouths belonging to an average Irishwoman of the middle class", "he looked like a waiter thrown out of employment through old age".....very graphic, colorful, but somehow cartoonish. Anyway, little gripes aside, this is a novel that will hold your attention. It hangs together very well, connecting Irish history and society with a film-noir atmosphere of suspense, action, and intrigue. It catches the Dublin and the Ireland of the time, now changed out of all recognition by prosperity and respectability. And more luck to Ireland for that.

The Real Story

This is a good novel about Ireland's ongoing troubles. It spares us the contrived world of the Clancy brothers and rebel songs. The story is set in the years after the establishment of the Irish Free State. The protagonists, unlike in the movie, are not patriots per se but rather communists or IRA members who wanted complete independence from the United Kingdom. Gypo Nolan and his victim Frankie McPhilip are less than valued members of the organization. The story deals with successful efforts to track down Gypo who informed on Frankie. It is noted that Gypo betrayed Frankie to the police not to the Black and Tans as in the movie. It is a gripping story and it is also a good antidote to stories of the noble Irish and the evil Brits. Please note carefully O'Flaherty's description of the leader of the organization. The author was a member of the Communist Party who had a somewhat different take on the situation in Ireland. If you want an alternative view of the Irish troubles which is also a good read this is the book for you.

Good read

I've read this book twice. It was actually better the second time. The movie adaptation is even better than the book, with the lead actor receiving the Oscar for that year. Whether you watch the movie or read the book, you can't go wrong in my opinion. The struggles of life in Ireland, the betrayal by a friend for money, and the descriptions of the characters and places kept me turning the pages.

Greatest book i've read in a while

this book is great, it deals with a friend who turns on another friend and realizes what he has done right before he dies. a great book for plot summary reports and just for all around reading.
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