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The novel was published in [[Penguin Books|Penguin Modern Classics]] in 2000 with the typographic error "Tarry Flyn" on the cover and spine.
The novel was published in [[Penguin Books|Penguin Modern Classics]] in 2000 with the typographic error "Tarry Flyn" on the cover and spine.


Quotations of ''Tarry Flynn'' were sprayed on the walls of O'Connell street in [[Limerick City]] during 2009, as [[Graffiti|graffiti]].
Quotations of ''Tarry Flynn'' were sprayed on the walls of O'Connell street in [[Limerick]] during 2009, as [[Graffiti|graffiti]].
==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.penguinclassics.co.uk/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9780141183619,00.html ''Tarry Flynn'' at PenguinClassics]
*[http://www.penguinclassics.co.uk/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9780141183619,00.html ''Tarry Flynn'' at PenguinClassics]

Revision as of 15:05, 18 June 2010

Tarry Flynn
AuthorPatrick Kavanagh
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel
PublisherPenguin
Publication date
1948
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages192, depending on edition
ISBN978-0141183619
OCLC247406218
Preceded byThe Good Child
(1947) 
Followed byBy Night Unstarred
(1977) 

Tarry Flynn is a novel by Irish poet and novelist Patrick Kavanagh, set in 1930s rural Ireland. The book is based on Kavanagh's experience as a young farmer in Monaghan. The novel however is set in Cavan. The story is based on the life of a young farmer poet and his quest for big fields, young women and the meaning of life.

Publication history

Kavanagh began writing Tarry Flynn in 1940 under the title Stony Grey Soil. It was, however rejected. After his collection of poetry A Soul for Sale, containing the poem The Great Hunger, was published to great acclaim in February 1947, he set about revising the novel and spent the summer of 1947 working on it. It was published by The Pilot Press in November 1948. The novel was banned by the Irish Censorship Board for being "indecent and obscene". The ruling was overturned following a challenge by the publisher.

The novel was produced as a play at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin in 1966, adapted by P.J O'Connor. It was adapted for the stage again in 1997 by Conall Morrison.

The novel was published in Penguin Modern Classics in 2000 with the typographic error "Tarry Flyn" on the cover and spine.

Quotations of Tarry Flynn were sprayed on the walls of O'Connell street in Limerick during 2009, as graffiti.