Fascinating reading. It is obviously a labour of love and a work of deep academic research by its editor, Professor John Brannigan, head of English at UCD. He has not only compiled the articles but annotated them with extensive footnotes to explain their numerous references so that we can enjoy Behan in his own time.
Brannigans 33 pages of notes gives us the societal context in which Behan was writing and catches his irreverence [in these] discursive, engaging and sometimes fantastical columns.
Behans columns gathered here, written in haste and mischievousness to earn money, give readers a more anarchic Dublin while also taking us on excursions across Ireland and to his beloved Paris. They show an apprentice writer, vibrantly in love with words and with no idea where those words would lead him in the few short years to come. Dermot Bolger, Sunday Business Post
Laugh-out-loud anarchy on a page there is, as far as I know, no contemporary newspaper or online Irish writer as fluent, as stir-it-up anarchic, as powerful, or as sharp as The Roaring Boy was over these brief few years. No-one comes even close to using humour to fillet pretension and hubris as well as he did. There is a vibrancy, a razor-sharp relevance to these pieces missing from todays public discourse. His skill with the pun in Irish and English the timing of his interjections, his capacity to give his sentences a steady pulse animates these pieces in a way that few of todays Irish writers can. By reminding us of these wonderful vignettes, editor John Brannigan has served Behans legacy and his readers very well. Jack Power, Irish Examiner
As a writer, Brendan Behan is best known for just a handful of works. We owe much to John Brannigan for shining a brighter light on Behan than ever before, and allowing a fuller writer to emerge before us. Like John's earlier work on Behan, this publication is deeply important in understanding the man and showman that was Brendan Behan.
Donal Fallon
His writing still has a freshness and modernity about it The columns are a testimonial to Behans fluency in, and knowledge of, Irish poetry and song [and] they show what a natural and gifted writer Behan was. Stuffed with jokes and comic set pieces, they nevertheless have a serious political undertow. A Bit of a Writermakes a significant contribution to Brendan Behans centenary year. Irish Times
In A Bit of a Writer, we have everything for the first time. Thank you, John Brannigan These pieces might look like colour copy but really theyre ethnography of the richest and most exact kind. George Orwell would have liked them, and he would certainly have recognised that the man who wrote them had similar interests to himself, speaking truth to power about the poor, the marginal, the downtrodden [He informed, educated and entertained me] with style and wit and at 100 miles an hour, and I was never bored, not for one second. Carlo Gebler, Irish Independent
A Bit of a Writer, commendably edited with context-providing endnotes by Professor Brannigan, UCDs head of English, grants us a new opportunity to consider the writer behind the self-ruining public image Drawing from a deep folkloric well, he comes across less a literary figure in the modernist sense than a seanchai in the oral tradition.
Its Behans passion for Ireland in general and Dublin in particular that gets to the heart of his popular appeal An added charm for Jackeens such as this southside reviewer is the columns locational intimacy, peppered as these are with mentions of Crumlin, Kimmage, Dolphins Barn, Sundrive Road, the Liberties and the Coombe.
The book isnt just a Dublin love-in: Cork, Tipperary, Waterford and other counties are also fondly evoked. (Actually, the entries I enjoyed most were those covering Behans trips to France and particularly Paris always her own sweet self.)
A Bit of a Writer is the sort of book best dipped into at random (and perhaps even read aloud) [it won't] disappoint anyone drawn to the mans wisecracking, gun-toting, hard-living persona. Rob Doyle, Sunday Independent
This utter delight of a book captures the real essence of the man. The big gotcha in the book, for this reader, is the humour it's superb. You can read and savour one piece at a time or swallow it whole. Either way, it's a beauty. Anne Cunningham, Meath Chronicle
This really does give you a different look at a mercurial talent a great introduction to Brendan Behan, very much informed by his sensibilities and it rings so clear. Derek O'Connor, RTE Lyric FM
A wonderful collection What we find here is a brilliantly talented writer, far removed from any cliches
SUNDAY INDEPENDENT