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The Dalkey Archive

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Country
  
Ireland

Media type
  
Print, hardback, 8vo

OCLC
  
2236946

Originally published
  
1964

Publisher
  
Hart-Davis, MacGibbon

ISBN
  
0261615564

3.8/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Pages
  
222

Dewey Decimal
  
823.912

Author
  
Brian O'Nolan

Page count
  
222

The Dalkey Archive t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcQ0NU2vg9Nf1U9X3

Genres
  
Humorous Fiction, Philosophical fiction

Similar
  
Brian O'Nolan books, Ireland books, Fiction books

The Dalkey Archive is a 1964 novel by the Irish writer Flann O'Brien. It is his fifth and final novel, published two years before his death. It was adapted for the stage by Hugh Leonard in 1965 as The Saints Go Cycling In.

Contents

Plot summary

The book features a mad scientist, De Selby, who tries to destroy the world by removing all the oxygen from the air. He has also many strange inventions. He exploits the theory of relativity and invents a kind of time travelling machine, which he uses to age his whiskey, creating brews that have been aged for many decades in just a few hours.

Saint Augustine and James Joyce both have speaking parts in the novel. James Joyce, after forging his own obituary to escape being drafted to fight in the Second World War, was serving pints in a small pub. Saint Augustine, on the other hand, appeared in a magical underwater cave and held a conversation with De Selby. The mad scientist De Selby leads the two main characters, Hackett and Mick, to the cave, to witness this conversation.

Many prominent elements of the book, particularly De Selby himself, the eccentric policemen, and the atomic theory of the bicycle, were taken from O'Brien's much earlier novel The Third Policeman, because he had not been able to find a publisher for it. The latter novel was published posthumously.

Furthering reading

  • Booker, M. Keith (1993). "The Dalkey Archive: Flann O'Brien's Critique of Mastery". Irish University Review. 23 (2): 269–285. JSTOR 25484569. 
  • Coulouma, Flore (2011). "Negotiating Tradition: Flann O'Brien's Tales of Digression and Subversion". Digressions in European Literature. Springer. pp. 143–155. 
  • Hellman, Wesley J. (2013). "Power and Parody: Flann O'Brien's Satire of Repressive Irish Identity, 1937-1966". Indiana University of Pennsylvania. 
  • Barone, Dennis (1996). "What's in a Name? The Dalkey Archive Press". Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. 37 (3): 222–239. 
  • Dotterer, Ronald L. (2004). "Flann O'Brien, James Joyce, and The Dalkey Archive". New Hibernia Review. 8 (2): 54–63. 
  • References

    The Dalkey Archive Wikipedia