Duffy and Son, Damien Owens
Duffy and Son, Damien Owens
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

Duffy and Son

Author: Damien Owens

Narrator: Gerry O’Brien

Unabridged: 8 hr 25 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: HarperCollins

Published: 03/31/2022


Synopsis

A heart-warming and hilarious novel about life, love, and the weight of all we leave unsaid, Duffy & Son is a quietly moving masterpiece from one of Ireland’s most gifted comic writers. Eugene Duffy is turning 70; his son Jim is turning 40. For decades now, they’ve been running the family hardware shop and living in good-natured bachelor harmony. But time is marching on, and with thoughts of old age weighing heavily on his mind, Eugene is growing increasingly concerned about his son’s future. He resolves to help in the best way possible: by finding Jim a wife. And he’s not going to let anyone – let alone Jim himself – stand in his way. Reminiscent of Fredrik Backman’s bestselling novel , contains a likeable but curmudgeonly main character, wry humour, tremendous heart, as well as a strong sense of community. It is a funny and heartwarming novel which celebrates the messiness of ordinary lives and would make a perfect reading group choice.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Anna

I didn't really find this book to be neither "hilarious" nor "heartwarming", let alone a "masterpiece". It was okay. For the better part of it nothing significant happens. The plot moves slow and without much of a fuss. The whole family dynamics felt off, the reluctant conversations the siblings wer......more

Goodreads review by Mairead

Duffy and Son by Damien Owens publishes March 31st with Harper Collins Ireland and is described as ‘a funny and heart-warming novel which celebrates the messiness of ordinary lives’. For anyone who has had or is having an aging crisis, part of the inspiration behind Duffy and Son will resonate. Damie......more


Quotes

‘Funny, sweet, charming and just a little bit heart-breaking’ – Dara O’Briain ‘Immensely enjoyable … By turn, hilarious and heartbreaking, we rarely hear the perspective of the ageing working class man worrying about his bachelor son and I think that’s why it was such a refreshing read … It’s such a tender, warmhearted portrait of a man who has always thought he’d done his best and is now suddenly faced with the notion that he might have failed. Skilfully drawn characters jump to life and the storytelling is enormously entertaining … a universal story, told in a uniquely Irish way.’ – Liz Nugent