Virtual country toursIrish authors

World Literary Tour: Visit Ireland in 5 Books

It’s Reading Ireland month and though we’d normally be heading to the pub around no to celebrate St Patrick’s Day, they’re all closed because of the Covid-19 pandemic. So we’ll just have to mark the occasion with a virtual tour that honours the rich literary heritage of Ireland.

There are hundreds of novels I could pick for this tour. If you don’t believe me, just take a look at the 746books blog. Cathy has created three separate lists based on her extensive knowledge of her country’s literary scene. So you can choose from 100 Irish novels, 100 novels by Irish women writers and 100 titles by authors from Northern Ireland.

I’m going to limit myself to just five novels. They’re all books that have made a deep impression upon me.

5 novels by Irish authors that will leave a lasting impression on you as a reader

Edna O’Brien didn’t enamour herself to people in Ireland when her first novel The Country Girls was published in 1960. It was banned by the Irish censorship board and faced significant public criticism because of its portrayal of sex outside marriage. The Catholic Church called it “filth”

O’Brien has since redeemed herself to the extent she was honoured in 2015 as a Saoithe of Aosdána, Ireland’s highest literary honour. She is still going strong though now in her early eighties and has continued to write about controversial subjects.

The Little Red Chairs is a haunting novel that takes its title from a tableau of 11,000 empty chairs created in Sarajevo to commemorate victims of the siege by Bosnian Serbs. Her main character – a fugitive war criminal  – is discovered hiding in a backwater village on the west coast of Ireland.

Colm Tóibin won the 2009 Costa Novel Award with his novel Brooklyn, the first half of which is set in the small Irish town of Enniscorthy. I enjoyed it but not as much as his later novel Nora Webster.

Where Brooklyn gave us a portrait of a young single girl, Nora Webster focuses on a middle-aged widow who is struggling to remake her life after the premature death of her husband. Though the focus is very much on the individual, there is a political background to the novel. We’re in the 1960s when political troubles north of the border are on the rise. Nora’s husband had a history of involvement with Fianna Fáil (Republican) politics, and now she discovers her daughter is taking part in protests in Dublin.

The Spinning Heart was one of my favourite novels from 2014. It would never have been published but for an intern who found it in a ‘reject’ pile and raved about it so much she persuaded the publishers it needed to see the light of day. The Booker Prize jurors agreed with her, longlisting it for their award in 2014.

Donal Ryan’s novel dives into a community that is reeling from the sudden end of a period of boom in Ireland, a time when the country was labelled as Celtic Tiger. A local building firm goes bust having over-stretched itself. The boss flees the country, leaving behind unpaid employees and no money in their pension funds. The repercussions are told through the voices of 21 characters who are directly or indirectly affected by the collapse. It’s a masterful work of characterisation.

Bold, brash and edgy; Lisa McInerey’s debut novel portrays a side of Ireland that never features in any tourism brochures. The Glorious Heresies takes us deep in the seedy underworld of Cork; into its grim housing estates populated by schoolboy drug dealers and malicious thugs.

It might sound grim but McInery make us both weep and laugh at the sheer muddle of the lives of the misfits that inhabit this small city. For sheer exuberant story-telling, this is a novel that would be hard to beat.

Milkman is a novel I didn’t think I would finish. But I did and it was one of the highlights of my reading year in 2018.

It’s a strange novel. The location is never named (though we are led to believe it’s Belfast); nor is the narrator. In fact none of the characters have real names; they’re given soubriquets instead which can make the novel confusing. But once you’ve worked out who “third brother-in-law”, “tablets girl”, “nuclear boy” and “maybe-boyfriend” are, and have read between the lines to appreciate what’s actually happening, the book proves riveting.

Burns tackles a problematic period in the history of Ireland, the years known as The Troubles, when paramilitary forces took their fight for independence onto the streets, dolling out summary justice to anyone standing in their way. The narrator is a teenager who catches the unwelcome attention of a paramilitary leader, turning her into a figure of distrust and fear in her community.

It’s a tremendous novel, unconventional but unforgettable.


It’s hard to do justice to a country with such a rich culture and history in just 5 books. I know there are many other books that deserve a place on this list. What would you put on your list?

BookerTalk

What do you need to know about me? 1. I'm from Wales which is one of the countries in the UK and must never be confused with England. 2. My life has always revolved around the written and spoken word. I worked as a journalist for nine years then in international corporate communications 3. My tastes in books are eclectic. I love realism and hate science fiction and science fantasy. 4. I am trying to broaden my reading horizons geographically by reading more books in translation

28 thoughts on “World Literary Tour: Visit Ireland in 5 Books

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  • I’ve read The Little Red Chairs, excellent, and Nora Webster and Brooklyn, both of which were very good too. I enjoyed Nora Webster better too!

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    • That’s good to hear Peggy, Brooklyn has had all the attention but Nora tends to be overlooked

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  • I can’t believe no one’s mentioned Good Behaviour by Mollie Keane. It’s one of the books I give as a present when I hear someone hasn’t read her as it captivated me years ago when it was first published.

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  • Great choices Karen, I loved all of these that I’ve read – the only one I haven’t is the Toibin, which I really muct rectify!

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    • Nora Webster resonated with me far more than Brooklyn for which he had a lot of attention.

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      • I wasn’t overly impressed with Brooklyn either so I’ll try this one.

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    • Fabulous, I had some book club members say they thought Milkman was too difficult

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      • I listened to it–that may have helped. I just got caught up in the rhythm of it. Maybe all that rap my son blasted and wrote affected me? LOL It was a very, very good book.

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    • I didn’t initially. In fact I almost abandoned it, but am so glad I didn’t

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  • Good list and good reviews. I loved Brooklyn and now want to read Nora. I also LOVED Milkman, but I can understand why some people thought it was crazy. For me it was like poetry and I adored it.

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  • Great lineup of novels. I have never heard of any of them. but they all sound good.
    Thanks so much for sharing.

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    • I’ve not yet read her but I have The Last September on my TBR – had hoped to get around to it for Irish lit month but it wasnt to be

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  • I, too, enjoyed both Norah Webster and Milkman. I would add John Boyne’s “A History of Loneliness” which deals with the crisis in the Catholic Church following the revelations about abuse by priests.

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    • He’s someone I’ve not read yet Frank. I have a different one by him lurking on the shelves – The Absolutionist. Have you read that – would you recommend?

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    • I enjoyed his more recent book too so he’s definitely someone for me to watch

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  • Well, I would certainly have both Nora Webster and Milkman on my list. In their very different ways I think they’re both works of genius. In fact, before it was called off, I was due to be leading a discussion on milkman this evening. It’s gone down so well with the other members of the group that they are insisting that as soon as we can get back together it’s the first book on our list. Another author I would put in there, is Claire McGowan. Her series of crime novels featuring Paula Maguire are a really interesting exploration of the difficulties faced by the PSNI as they try to police V count is on the border with the Republic in the light of the aftermath of the disbanding of the are you see. They might not be great literature, but they are a closely observed exploration of the problems facing the people of Ireland in the aftermath of the Troubles described by Anna Burns.

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    • I had hoped our book club would choose Milkman but someone said ‘its difficult’ and that put the rest of the group off it…. well yes you have to work your way into it but describing it as difficult I think is an over-statement

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  • The only one of these I’ve read is Nora Webster and I enjoyed that more than Brooklyn too. I’d have Maggie O’Farrell on my list – The Hand That first Held Mine and After You’d Gone are both good and I also enjoyed Molly Fox’s Birthday by Deirdre Madden. There are others too, but these two authors came to mind when I read your post. I didn’t fancy reading Milkman, but you’ve tempted me with your description.

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    • Darn it, I could have chosen O’Farrell too. My favourite is The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox, maybe because it was the first one by her that I’d read. But I also loved her recent memoir I am I am I am…..

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  • Thank you for this. I often feel that, being in the U.S., I don’t read enough about literature of other countries.

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    • I can sympathise Mary. I made a conscious effort a few years ago to find books from parts of the world other than UK and USA…. It’s been enlightening…

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