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Click here for The Long Run reading guide. Reviews of The Long Run
"Inspirational without being mawkish. Furey’s debut is a shoo-in for book clubs."—Publishers Weekly "The Long Runis a ghastly-wonderful journey through a pious hell run by lunatics, an antic dance of grim humor, genuine pathos, and final redeeming joy."—The Globe & Mail "Like Frank McCourt's Angela's Ashes, The Long Run finds humor and even joy in a childhood that reads at times like something out of Charles Dickens."—The Toronto Star "Funny, sad, forgiving, and redemptive, The Long Run wonderfully and tenderly evokes a time and place and shows us boys fighting for survival and happiness in the face of relentless and often heartless opposition. The reader fights and wins with them."—Wayne Johnston, author of The Navigator of New York and The Colony of Unrequited Dreams "What got me is how laugh-out-loud funny this book is. Yet the whole is suffused with an aura of incredible sadness. It is universal in its message that adversity and systematic repression can reveal the infinite resourcefulness and indomitability of people, especially young people. Leo Furey has turned bitter experience into a work of art."—Robert MacNeil, author of Wordstruck and Burden of Desire "This
is a novel about the past—a past that is presented in such detail that
it becomes the present, and, in its finality, knows no boundaries. It
is a story of everlasting friendships forged in youth and
pain."—Alistair MacLeod, author of No Great Mischief "Furey’s tragicomic tale of orphanage life in St. John’s during the sixties will win your heart and break it by turns. The Long Run is a vivid account of brutality, laughter, the unwavering bravery of childhood, and a hard resilience—it cannot fail to move its readers."—Lisa Moore, author of Open and Alligator Description of The Long Run
From a hill above town, the Mount Kildare Orphanage for Boys looks down on the
small city of St. John’s, Newfoundland. The year is 1960. The
orphanage is always cold, there is never enough to eat, and the
Catholic Brothers who run the home are heavy-handed in their religious
discourses and harsh in their discipline. Here, a group of boys
manages to look out for each other and live by their own set of rules. |






