William Trevor has been described as 'perhaps the finest short-story writer in the English language', and he brings a special sensibility and awareness to his role as editor. All the stories in his selection 'have been influenced by a culture that made much of the fiction it could best absorb'. They are 'the distillations of an essence', in whose subtleties portraiture thrives. Some deriver their strength from brevity, others require a considerable spread to achieve their effect. Trevor does not eschew the long short story, as distinct from the novella, so the masterly 'Albert Nobbs' by George Moore is accorded its place, and Willam Carleton, Sheridan Le Fanu, Seumas O'Kelly, and James Joyce are all given the space their writing deserves.
The roots of the modern short story in Ireland are firmly embedded in the soil of the past, and in this wonderful anthology echoes and influences pervade individual stories to enrich our understanding of unique literary tradition.