Get Framed Of Rathgar For Free

03 May 2024

On Sunday 5th May, my novel Framed of Rathgar will be FREE on Amazon Kindle. You can get a copy from here, or you can get a copy in paperback. (From midnight PDT for some reason.)

Who controls your life? Dublin, Ireland. Cathal, Dean and Tomasz are three lads living in Rathgar, or to them Bedsit-land. They have good jobs, ok some of them do. All is well, or it was. City living gets harder as life throws the unexpected at them, including a find that will lead them to the centre of a gang war. Just how much control do they really have over their lives? And what secrets will come out?

UK https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B07T91FR93
or
US https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07T91FR93
Rest of the world see your local Amazon, it will be available.

Set in Dublin over the course of a year it follows the lives of three lads who live in the leafy suburb of Rathgar. You can get a copy from Amazon or my website http://www.arthurhofn.home.blog.

“They walked in silence for the most part. Tomasz seemingly lost in a world of his own, and Dean himself, not feeling like saying much, assuming his partner felt the same. Dean generally walked in front of Tomasz on the right hand side of the road in case any other vehicles passed by; they did not.
The air remained wet and visibility was low. It was only because he knew there was a barren wilderness out there that Dean had any idea, there could have been anything lost in the mist and fog.
Occasionally they passed a fork in the road but they decided to keep on the main track, regardless of if the new road seemed to promise a higher elevation. Roads and tracks out here could suddenly disappear and they didn’t want to add getting lost to their heap of woes at the present.”

I lived in and around Rathgar for over a decade, it’s an important place to me. Sadly I no longer live in Dublin, but I was able to reconnect with it by writing this novel.

I hope you enjoy your free copy.

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Return To Rathgar

22 April 2024

My novel Framed Of Rathgar has been republished! Set In Dublin over the course of a year it follows the lives of three lads who live in the leafy suburb of Rathgar. I’m very pleased with it. You can get a copy from here.

‘I don’t understand what is wrong with the guitar,’ Tomasz commented as they walked away.
‘Normally nothing,’ answered Dean.
‘But the moment one’s brought out at a party,’ explained Cathal, ‘it sucks all the life out of it. Everyone has to sit there and politely listen, when instead all anyone wants to do is just kill themselves; or is that just me?’
‘You have strong feelings on this matter,’ replied Tomasz.
‘And the ego on him,’ Cathal continued, ‘does he think we’ve just all come to listen to his rendition of Black is the Colour or whatever?’
‘He does indeed have strong feelings on the matter.’

Earlier in the year I stated I had felt the need to redraft my existing novels, simply because I knew I could make them better. It’s always hard to do everything yourself, you’re too close to it all so see, therefore it’s natural to miss typos etc. However, I’ve now got some proper editing software and it’s a revelation! Therefore I’ve been slowly working my way through my books and making some changes and my second novel, Framed of Rathgar is now available once more, in better shape than ever and with an ever better cover, yet another thing I’m getting better at doing.

It’s already available, and I’ll do another free e-book day of this when I can and I’ll post about that then.

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Why Dublin?

The reasons for setting a novel in the city.

As I state elsewhere I’m not Irish. However I have lived for many of my important years in Dublin. To me it’s the default city. I’ve lived in other places but the experiences I have had in the Irish capital are really what made me me. Therefore when I came to write my novel Framed In Rathgar, it wasn’t so much a choice to set the book there, I just did because that is the place I knew the best.

Dublin of course is steeped in literary heroes, enough in itself a reason to be inspired. To name a few you have James Joyce, Bram Stoker, George Bernard Shaw, Jonathan Swift, Oscar Wilde, and W.B. Yeats; all with ties to the city. But these are the obvious ones. Just after I first moved to Ireland I found myself in a bookshop and decided it would be inexcusable not to buy some Irish books. Among the ones I chose was The Informer by Liam O’Flaherty (published in 1925). Set in the 1920s. it tells the story of a man who informs on his friend and spends the rest of the novel in fear of the repercussions. Set in a grimy, poor Dublin where men book themselves in to hostels for a place to stay the night only if they can afford it and roam the streets the rest of the time looking for any money they can spend, this was a very different view of the city I had, having come in the closing years of the Celtic Tiger.

The fascinating thing is with its Georgian buildings still intact this fictional world is still there, almost as if I had been reading a document from the city’s history. Just walking through Merrion Square and the surrounding streets, or on the Northside Mountjoy Sqaure, are enough to take in the grand buildings and let your imagination run wild. The fact is I’ve just taken two places I frequented, there is so much more, the city is full with this identity… and doors that tourists love to photograph.

The real Rathgar.

For others Dublin is a fast moving city of opportunity and learning, Trinity College, Grafton Street and Guinnesses, modern reasons to visit, but stretching back through the years in its urban soul. There are so many hooks to put a story on here, and so much of its own local myth you will never finish with the possibilities of creating a fiction in these streets.

Dublin is in some ways very different from the rest of the country’s open country vibe. But it’s still small enough to represent the attitudes of the rest of the nation. Dubliners are still Irish and keep the culture alive and strong (sometimes more so than the rest of land if you’ve been in Gogarty’s pub in Temple Bar – actually well worth a night if you’re a tourist for Irish songs and music, but expensive).

Brighton Square in the snow.

I, and a number of my friends, lived in or around Rathgar, what estate agents would describe as a “leafy suburb”. I never lived on the main Rathgar Road, but I did for a while have a place on Leinster Road (it’s almost compulsory to live for even a short time on either of the two streets if you are going to have a studio in the Dublin 6 postcode). Rathgar is a really good place to live, as the three protagonists keep saying. You can walk to the Liffey (the very centre of Dublin) in about twenty minutes; but full of cafes and bookshops, pubs and parks (along with Rathmines) makes itself a good location in its own right. There is the full sweep of human life in these roads; from the millionaires in the refurbished and stunning homes, to the students and others squashed in the houses that have been converted to small studios. There are many stories here told to large audiences, some talked about between friends, others still waiting to find their voice. I just wanted to add my tiny piece to the flow.

Buy The Informer by Liam O’Flaherty
Buy Framed Of Rathgar by Arthur Hofn (Me!)

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