This collection has been sitting on our shelves for years and I finally got around to reading it. I found it a wonderful sampling of some exceptional story-telling. Yes, the giants are here--Joyce, Beckett, Yeats, Synge, Bowen--but alongside these luminaries were offerings from lesser known writers whose work, at least herein, is every bit as impressive. The introductory essay by Anthony Burgess sets the right tone, and while the overall mood of the volume is undoubtedly as moody and overcast as the Irish climate, the descriptions and characterizations are rich and deeply humane. The highlight of the book for me was also the longest story, Seumas O'Kelly's "The Weaver's Grave", which manages to be both hysterically funny and heart-rending at the same time. It was unlike any story I've ever read. Joyce's "The Dead" needs no hyping from me, but if you've not read Bowen's "Summer Night", or Bryan McMahon's "Exile's Return", or Mary Lavin's "Happiness", you owe yourself the treats.