Tara Road

Tara Road is a novel by Maeve Binchy. It was chosen as an Oprah's Book Club selection in September 1999.

Tara Road
First edition cover
AuthorMaeve Binchy
Country Ireland
LanguageEnglish
GenreNovel
PublisherOrion
Publication date
28 August 1998
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages608 pp (hardback edition)
ISBN0-7528-1447-8 (hardback edition) & ISBN 0-385-33512-1
Preceded byEvening Class 
Followed byScarlet Feather 

Plot introduction

It is the story of two women, one from Ireland and one from America, who trade houses without ever having met. They're both looking for an escape from their problems, but by running away, both come to discover a great deal about themselves.

The book mostly concentrates on the life of Ria Lynch, the Irish woman, who has met her future husband Danny Lynch. The two end up getting married, much to Ria's shock and delight, and start a family together while Danny's career takes off. Many years into their marriage, Danny begins spending less and less time at home with his wife and children. Ria believes another baby is the solution, and is shocked to find out that indeed her husband is going to be a father...but to a child from an affair he has been having with another woman. Her husband's unfaithfulness is the event that leads Ria into her decision to switch homes with the lady from America. Tara Road was made into a film in 2005.

Characters

  • Ria Lynch, housewife whose life collapses when Danny leaves her after he gets a girlfriend pregnant
  • Danny Lynch, a heartbreaker who has a woman around every corner
  • Rosemary Ryan, a beautiful businesswoman, best friends with Ria though sleeping with her husband Danny
  • Annie Lynch, Ria and Danny's first child
  • Brian Lynch, Danny and Ria's second child, known for his tactlessness

Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

The novel was turned into a film in 2005. It stars Andie MacDowell and Olivia Williams. Written by Cynthia Cidre and Shane Connaughton and directed by Gillies MacKinnon. Maeve Binchy makes a cameo appearance in the first scene at Colm's restaurant.

gollark: Anyway, text is not big - you can fit an entire book (again with compression) into less than a megabyte. In many ebooks the cover image and such are larger than the actual text.
gollark: > Take that backNo. They're basically just PICTURES OF PAGES with some metadata. They are AWFUL for anything but scanned documents.
gollark: It's a highly compressed archive of HTML pages and images and stuff.
gollark: No, PDFs are terrible.
gollark: See, the thing is, text files are actually *not big* and compress really well.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.