The Edge of Sadness is a novel by the American author Edwin O'Connor. It was published in 1961 and won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1962. The story is about a middle-aged Catholic priest in New England.
Story
This drama revolves around Father Hugh Kennedy, who is a recovering alcoholic. in the beginning of the story Kennedy has returned to his home town (an unnamed New England seaport city that is the seat of a bishop rather than an archbishop; it thus most closely corresponds with O'Connor's own birthplace of Providence, RI) to try to mend his professional career as a priest. He becomes involved again with the Carmodys, a wealthy family whose ancestry, like his own, is Irish, and whom he has known since childhood. The story that unfolds is a tale of long hidden emotion and longing. It deals with friendship and loneliness, spirituality and newfound hope.
External links
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- Photos of the first edition of The Edge of Sadness
References
- ^ http://www.amazon.com/Edge-Sadness-Loyola-Classics/dp/0829421238