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Featured image of Normal People (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

Normal People (Longlisted, 2019 Women’s Prize for Fiction)

In her second novel, Sally Rooney delivers a compelling love story set in the West of Ireland and grounded in the political realities of recent times. Normal People was hotly anticipated, well received, and continues to see Rooney lauded as a generational writer. Nevertheless, the passivity with which the millennial label is applied within critical Read More

Featured image of A Life of Adventure and Delight

A Life of Adventure and Delight

Simple stories are sometimes the most appealing ones. Love, trying to fit in or to find oneself are examples of themes present not only in Akhil Sharma’s short story collection, but also in the everyday lives of most people. However, these topics are also painfully commonplace in art and culture, and thus often feel cliched Read More

Featured image of Stranger, Baby (Shortlisted, 2017 Forward Poetry Prize for Best Collection)

Stranger, Baby (Shortlisted, 2017 Forward Poetry Prize for Best Collection)

“The loss of a mother must be something very strange…”. This epigraph from Sigmund Freud sets the scene for Emily Berry’s superb second collection, Stranger, Baby, which concerns the sense of dislocation, “dismantlement” and alterity brought about by intense grief. The suicide of her mother left the narrator/Berry all at sea from the age of Read More

Featured image of THE LESSER BOHEMIANS (LONGLISTED, 2017 BAILEYS WOMEN’S PRIZE)

THE LESSER BOHEMIANS (LONGLISTED, 2017 BAILEYS WOMEN’S PRIZE)

You may not like this book at first. I didn’t. The prose is ungrammatical and sometimes incomprehensible.  For instance:  “he at wall.  I the edge.  Back to.  Sheet damp.” But be patient, for these are thoughts, and thoughts don’t care about grammar. They often omit words and leave gaps, and simply splash images and emotions Read More

Featured image of Brother

Brother

Perhaps we all long for a more carefree period in our lives. Nostalgia for childhood is almost universal; however, this outwardly innocent melancholy is ultimately dangerous as by its very nature nostalgia romanticises and we forget the past’s real darkness. In Brother, award-winning American poets Matthew and Michael Dickman’s latest collaborative collection, the sibling poets Read More

Featured image of The Seasons of Cullen Church

The Seasons of Cullen Church

Originally from Cullen, Co. Cork, Bernard O’Donoghue has been an English don at Oxford University since 1965. This is his sixth collection. O’Donoghue has been a recipient of the Whitbread (now Costa) Prize for Poetry and Faber published his Selected Poems in 2008.Being shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize (for the best collection of Read More

Featured image of The Gustav Sonata (Longlisted, 2017 Baileys Women’s Prize)

The Gustav Sonata (Longlisted, 2017 Baileys Women’s Prize)

Rose Tremain’s masterful, melancholic and ambitious novel is brimful of the sights and smells of post-war Switzerland, leaving little to the imagination.  Dispelling myths of serene neutrality, her book leads us though a winding path of uncertainty and angst, where “neutrality” is replaced with thorny indifference and there is little grey area between friendship and servitude. In this tantalising tale of adolescence, we follow Gustav Perle on his struggle of discovery. There are few heart-warming moments Read More

Featured image of Days Without End  (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa Novel Award)

Days Without End (Shortlisted, 2016 Costa Novel Award)

In recent years, Sebastian Barry’s literary career has had tremendous world-wide recognition and success. The list of awards and nominations his works has garnered seems endless. From The Steward of Christendom (1995) which won him The Christopher Ewart-Biggs Memorial Prize, through A Long Long Way (2005) (Man Booker Prize shortlisted), to one of his most Read More

Featured image of Go Giants

Go Giants

Nick Laird (Faber & Faber, 2015); pbk £10.99 Laird and I share the hometown of Cookstown, Co. Tyrone, right in the heart of Mid-Ulster. A busy market-town, it was relatively quiet during the Troubles, in comparison at least with the hotspots of Belfast and Derry/Londonderry. But it was not untouched. This common experience of growing Read More

Featured image of Under the Rose

Under the Rose

Under the Rose is a new collection of old short stories by Julia O’Faolain; the original publication dates range from her earliest collection in 1968 to a relatively recent collection in 2006. Plots, themes and structures vary greatly; some stories are taken from her childhood experiences, some from her adult relationships and some are entirely Read More

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