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...Luck of Ginger Coffey, by Brian Moore. The latest hero of wry, Belfast-born Canadian Novelist Moore is a Dublin-born, status-seeking New Canadian immigrant, whose life hovers between sad farce and sorry truth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: Time Listings, Sep. 5, 1960 | 9/5/1960 | See Source »

...Canadian, Ginger Coffey is a swiftly self-unmade man. Jobless, he spends the $600 his wife Veronica had set aside for return passage to Ireland. When he finally confesses this, Veronica sobs, slams and locks the bedroom door and leaves Ginger to warm his imagination on two quarts of beer. Armed with false courage and the recommendations of a cartoonist friend named Gerry Grosvenor, Ginger applies to the Montreal Tribune to become a Gentleman of the Press. But brrrr-tongued Managing Editor MacGregor, nicknamed Hitler by his staff, believes in starting everyone at the bottom, proofreading the galleys...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: New Canadian Blues | 8/29/1960 | See Source »

Desperate to eke out his income, Ginger enlists as a driver for a diaper service called Tiny Ones. He dons a battle jacket, military cap, sky-blue trousers and knee-length rubber boots, but the uniform of the diaper corps is not enough camouflage. Some home-town Dubliners spot him on his route and gleefully fire off letters to the old country reporting the comeuppance of proud Ginger Coffey...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: New Canadian Blues | 8/29/1960 | See Source »

Hailstones from Home. Meanwhile Gerry Grosvenor has become the other man in Veronica's life, and Ginger tortures himself with erotic fantasies of the pair's love life. Husband and wife are reunited in an episode bordering on burlesque. Answering a call of nature in the entranceway of a fashionable hotel, a boozed-up Ginger is booked for "indecent exposure." Then, in a dankly contemplative mood in his overnight cell, Ginger finally grows up: "A man's life was nobody's fault...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: New Canadian Blues | 8/29/1960 | See Source »

Words drop on Novelist Moore's pages with the errant grace and purity of snowflakes, and occasionally an epigrammatic hailstone comes rattling down on the author's adopted homeland, e.g., "Money is the Canadian way to immortality," "Canada is a bore." But in the end, Ginger Coffey refutes both charges...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: New Canadian Blues | 8/29/1960 | See Source »

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