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Paperback The Luck of Ginger Coffey Book

ISBN: 0140021159

ISBN13: 9780140021158

The Luck of Ginger Coffey

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

"No, for wasn't this the chance he had always wanted? Wasn't he at long last an adventurer, a man who had gambled all on one horse, a horse coloured Canada, which now by hook or by crook would carry him to fame and fortune?" Meet Ginger Coffey, the irrepressible fortune-hunter of Brian Moore's award-winning novel. The Luck of Ginger Coffey is the robust, funny, sometimes tragic tale of one unforgettable Irish immigrant to Montreal. Buoyed by unfailing...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Ginger Coffey learns what winning is all about

Having moved his family from Dublin to Canada, Ginger Coffey has about 15 dollars to his name, though an abundance of confidence (much of it false) as he goes about trying to find a job. Like Dickens's Micawber he is sure "something will turn up ("It's not even Christmas yet," he says at one point. "What's the hurry? I'll find something. Chin up!") But of course he never does, at least not something that will pay him decently. For a while he's forced to live alone in a room at the YMCA, cut off from his family. His wife Vera is threatening divorce, but Ginger is desperate to hold things together; both are tempted by adultery, but Ginger refuses to go that route. One disaster leads to another. Arrested for committing an embarrassing act of nature in a public place, he lies to the judge regarding who he really is to protect his wife and child. At this stage he begins to understand how he is responsible for his own life and actions: "A man's life was nobody's fault but his own." In a wonderfully developed reconciliation scene at the end, with Ginger about to walk out the door forever and Vera trying mightily to restrain him, Ginger accepts his fate and life with Vera. "Love isn't an act, it's a whole life," he reflects to himself. "Life was the victory, wasn't it? Going on was the victory." Moore's writing is sharp and compelling. He writes with great humor and human understanding and compassion. He makes Ginger Coffey a character we care about from beginning to end. It's a wonderful novel.

The luck of the Irish meets the Great Canadian Dream.

I truly love this book. In it, Brian Moore explores one man's heroic attempt to shift position in the world. Ginger Coffey leaves the unpromising economic situation in Dublin Ireland to pursue his idea of the Great Canadian Dream. With wife and daughter in tow, he arrives in Montreal in the dead of winter with $15.03 to his name. He has been waiting a long time for this golden opportunity. It soon becomes apparent however, that Canada was not as eagerly waiting for him! He manages to land a job at The Tribune, but rather than his desired position as journalist, he wallows among the other galley slaves as a lowly proofreader. They collectively suffer under an exploitative and humiliating boss, MacGregor. Because of his radical Irish optimism, Coffey is blind to the emptiness of the editor's promise to promote him to journalist "one day soon". Before that mysterious day which never arrives, Coffey is further forced to augment his meager wages by accepting a job as a diaper delivery man for a company called TINY-ONES. Is this the Utopia that he crossed an ocean for? Utopia-shmopia! But while his Great Canadian Dream is shattering he hears some trans-Atlantic gossip that suggests the situation back in Ireland is even worse! So his choice of Montreal is now an irrevocable one, if for no other reason than it at least affords him some anonymity until he hits the big time. But even this anonymity is brutalized one day when he encounters an old Dublin girlfriend while he is in the full garb of his TINY-ONES uniform. This is only one of a series of humiliations that Coffey experiences, not the least of which is the fact that his marriage is threatened, and he fears that his wife Vera is involved with an associate of his. His fears are correct... her involvement with the successful journalist Gerry Grosvenor amounts to a sort of clandestine infidelity, but unknown to Ginger, it has not been adulterous. At any rate, soon they are poised for a divorce. But the coup de grace in Ginger's bad luck comes one cold winter night as he stumbles out of a bar after drinking far too much of a mixture of wine and Coca-Cola. While waiting for the bus, he feels the need to unburden his bladder somewhat, and (thinking that he was up against an unoccupied office building) relieves himself in the doorway of one of the biggest hotels in the city! He is arrested for indecent exposure and has his (hilarious) day in court. In this case, the luck of the Irish turns out to be a six-month suspended sentence.It looks like things could get no worse. Coffey returns home to gather up his things and leave his family. But amazingly, his final courtroom incident has led to some genuine "luck" in the life of Ginger Coffey. A great final chapter shows us the joy that comes from true forgiveness and reconciliation. Ginger Coffey must resign himself to the fact that some very simple things in life (the renewed love of his wife, the steadfast love of his daughter) are like the consolation prize

A Most Insightful Look Into the Soul of a Modern Day Man

With Ginger Coffee, Brian Moore provides a very honest (sometimes painfully so) depiction of the highs and lows in the life of a common man. I devoured this book. At times I felt I was looking into a mirror. At other times I felt I was looking into a crystal ball. That the story is not only insightful, but also uplifting is a gift I shall never forget.

The Luck of Ginger Coffey

This book is a great book. It is written differently which is very good. As I read I seemed to flow with it and I felt everthing that the character Ginger Coffey felt. Each time something new came up, or another problem arised, you felt for the character, but you knew it would be ok. Summary: very interesting, easy to understand, and factual about immigrating

A very touching story

Ginger Coffee actually has a pretty sad life, however, his attitude towards his life is very interesting which gives a differect aspects of human.
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