Over The River PR

Your Bridge to Comprehensive Media Services

  • Home
  • What We Do
  • Who We Are
  • Who We Represent
    • Past Projects
  • What People Say About Us
  • Blog
  • Contact

By otrpr Leave a Comment

EXILE ON BRIDGE STREET receives rave reviews from Irish and mainstream press

EXILE_BRIDGE_STREET_Eamon_LoingsighWe’ve been fans of Eamon Loingsigh’s writing for some time now. We had the privilege to work on his debut novel, LIGHT OF THE DIDDICOY, and now we’re excited to be helping to spread the word regarding his new work, EXILE ON BRIDGE STREET.

 

Reviews are starting to come in, and the Irish press, indy press — ALL the press — are loving this new novel. Check out  what they have to say:

 

“In his beautiful, passionate prose, Loingsigh — an Irishman himself — continually reminds us of the motherland and the suffering of Irish emigrants. . . . EXILE ON BRIDGE STREET is a gangster story that reads more like “Robin Hood” than The Godfather because of these men’s inner strength and the love they have for each other. . . .
It’s also an intimate look at criminals whose lives have been hardened by oppression and weathered by storms, while inside their rough shells they hide soft hearts.”
—Washington Independent Review of Books

 

“When accomplished Irish American writers address the lives and experiences of the early 20th century Irish in New York they are recording, but also in a deeper sense also reclaiming a lost heritage. This is painstaking work that’s worth celebrating in its own right, but then to give us a vivid portrait of these flinty people in all their complexity and courage is a thing to cheer about. EXILE ON BRIDGE STREET, author Eamon Loingsigh’s new novel, is a follow up to Light of the Diddicoy, and it’s a high wire act of creativity and reclamation that deserves the widest possible audience.”
 —Irish Central“

 

Loingsigh has an urgent story to tell. And he tells it well. This is a street-level history of how the other half has always lived, the kind of story rarely worried over in classrooms or political campaigns. Loingsigh’s great strength is his unsentimental take on the immigrant experience which—despite the rancor of today’s debate—often acquires a sepia tone when it is discussed in the past tense. EXILE ON BRIDGE STREET should be required reading for those who rail about how today’s immigrants “refuse to assimilate.”
–Brooklyn Rail

 

[EXILE ON BRIDGE STREET], a follow-up to his previous gripping novel The Light of the Diddicoy, is set on the rough-and-tumble streets in the shadow of the Manhattan Bridge, where Irish and Italian immigrants fight fiercely for control of the docks and all the jobs and money that comes with that control…On the surface, Loingsigh’s book mines Brooklyn’s gory and glorious Irish past.  But it is also the quintessential read for 21st century Brooklyn. Not only is it all too plausible that Liam McGarrity’s grandchildren are cops of firefighters living in Marine Park.  But consider all of those immigrants coming into Brooklyn these days. Love? Death? Money? Struggles in the homeland? Surely they can relate to a thing or two Liam had to endure as he was becoming an American in Brooklyn. 
—Irish Voice

 

More reviews to come soon!

Filed Under: Books, Fiction, Reviews & Features, Uncategorized Tagged With: Brooklyn fiction, Brooklyn literature, Eamon Loingsigh, Exile on Bridge Street, historical fiction, Indy fiction, Irish American fiction, Irish American literature, Irish-American, Literary fiction, OTRPR, Over the River Public Relations, Three Rooms Press

By otrpr Leave a Comment

Discover Jay Neugeboren

For those who enjoy Philip Roth, you should read one of Jay Neugeboren’s novels.  He has had two published in the last six months — The Other Side of the World (Two Dollar Radio; December 2012) and The American Sun & Wind Moving Picture Company (Texas Tech University Press; March 2013).  He has been compared to Philip Roth (The Washington Post) and John Updike (Kirkus Reviews) and has been called, “one of our most honored writers of literary fiction” by The Los Angeles Times.  Learn more about this great writer by reading a recent interview he did with The Jewish Book Council: http://www.jewishbookcouncil.org/_blog/The_ProsenPeople/post/beth-kissileff-interviews-jay-neugeboren/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Jay Neugeboren, John Updike, Literary fiction, Over the River Public Relations, Philip Roth, Texas Tech University Press, The American Sun & Wind Moving Picture Company, The Other Side of the World, Two Dollar Radio

By otrpr Leave a Comment

Boston Globe calls Jay Neugeboren’s “The American Sun & Wind Moving Picture Company” intoxicating

The Boston Globe just ran a wonderful review of Jay Neugeboren’s 20th novel, “The American Sun & Wind Moving Picture Company” (March 2013; Texas Tech University Press).  Reviewer Madison Smartt Bell writes, “Already in the first chapter, the rapid weave of illusion and reality is intoxicating.”  She ends the review with the following: “In the case of any other author, this work might be taken as the capstone of a long and distinguished career, but Jay Neugeboren is tapping such a well of energy that he might not even be half-finished yet.”

Read the full review: http://www.bostonglobe.com/arts/books/2013/03/23/book-review-the-american-sun-and-wind-moving-picture-company-jay-neugeboren/ZNKP3JIxZmJXEZ5F3FWDIK/story.html

For more about Jay Neugeboren visit www.jayneugeboren.com.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Boston Globe, Jay Neugeboren, Literary fiction, Madison Smartt Bell, Silent film era, Texas Tech University Press, The American Sun & Wind Moving Picture Company

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

WOULD YOU LIKE TO GET IN TOUCH?

CONTACT US

Follow Us

Facebooktwitterpinterestlinkedininstagram

Copyright © 2025 · Site designed and maintained by Bakerview Consulting