Author | Brian Moore |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Bildungsroman |
Publisher | McClelland and Stewart (Canada) Viking Press (US) Andre Deutsch (UK) |
Publication date | 1965 |
Publication place | United States |
Pages | 250 |
OCLC | 368948 |
Preceded by | An Answer from Limbo (1962) |
Followed by | I Am Mary Dunne (1968) |
The Emperor of Ice-Cream is a 1965 coming-of-age novel[1] by writer Brian Moore. Set in Belfast during the Second World War, it tells the story of 17-year-old Gavin Burke who, admitting "war was freedom, freedom from futures", defies his nationalist and Catholic family by volunteering as an air raid warden with the largely Protestant ARP.[1] The novel follows Gavin's journey as he realises that there are those on the other side of the city's bitter communal division whose friendships offer a wider horizon.
Based in part on Moore's own wartime experiences,[2][3] he described it as the most autobiographical of his novels.[2] Moore left Belfast in 1943 to join the British Ministry of War Transport and worked himself for a period with the ARP in London.
The book is dedicated, as were all of Moore's subsequent novels, to his partner Jean,[4] who became his second wife two years after its publication. Its title is taken from Wallace Stevens' poem "The Emperor of Ice-Cream".
The book was dramatised by the Northern Irish actor, playwright and theatre director Bill Morrison; the play was performed at Dublin's Abbey Theatre in 1977.[5]