New Riders of the Celtic Wave, page 2
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John Banville
"A writer who has broadened the boundary of the Irish novel. He is a superb stylist who writes beautiful prose. 'The Book of Evidence' is the story of a man whose imagination fails him. He murders a woman because he can't imagine what her life was like. A compelling 'whydunit' rather than a whodunit."
From "The Book of Evidence" (Warner):
"Is there anything as powerfully, as piercingly evocative as the smell of the house in which one's childhood was spent? I try to avoid generalizations as no doubt the court has noticed but surely this is a universal, this involuntary spasm of recognition which comes with the first whiff of that humble drab brownish smell, which is hardly a smell at all, more an emanation, a sort of sigh exhaled by the thousands of known but unacknowledged tiny things that collectively constitute what is called home."
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Eoin McNamee
"His novel 'Resurrection Man,' set in Northern Ireland, is loosely based on Loyalist killing gangs of the '70s. On one level it's a thriller, but it's quite a mythic book in the way it deals with the power of violence and bloodlust. It's one of the best novels to deal with the conflict in Northern Ireland."
From "Resurrection Man" (Picador):
"James was a dock labourer. He had this deadpan look, a listener to deadpan jokes. It was like he saw himself as some hardluck figure for whom silence was a condition of survival. Bearing the name of Kelly meant that he was always suspected of being a Catholic. He protected himself by effacement. He was a quiet accomplice to the years of his fatherhood and left no detectable trace."
Patrick McCabe
"As one reads McCabe's novel, 'The Butcher Boy,' it is evident that something dreadful will come to pass but the narrator is unaware of this. The narrator's voice is chillingly disturbed."
From "The Butcher Boy" (Delta):
"I was thinking how right ma was -- Mrs. Nugent all smiles when she met us and how are you getting on Mrs. and young Francis are you both well? It was hard to believe that all the time what she was really saying was: Ah hello Mrs. Pig how are you and look Phillip do you see what coming now -- the Pig family."
Colum McCann
"Although McCann's novel 'Songdogs' has some weaknesses, he's a great writer. A New York-based Irish writer, he explores the relationship with homeland in a realistic, non-sentimental way. His excellent short story collection, 'Fishing the Sloe Black River,' will be published in the U.S. in early '96.
From "Songdogs" (Metropolitan):
"He woke up from the lawn chair, unaware I was sitting there, reached into his pocket for his packet of cigarettes. Before he lit up, he reamed from his chest and let a gob out towards the river. It landed near the bank close to where I was sitting. The spit was strung through with blood. 'Jaysus,' he said noticing me, 'I must have fallen asleep.' He saw me looking down. He was silent for a while, then he breathed deeply again through his nose. 'Too much raspberry jam on me toast this morning.' I felt a foul revulsion and love for him."
More recommendations by Mary Morrisey and a sampling of her own work