Showing posts with label Melissa Harrinson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Melissa Harrinson. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 28, 2023

Prophet Song by Paul Lynch review / Ireland under fascism


Illutration by Lucy Naland



BOOK OF THE DAY

Prophet Song by Paul Lynch review – Ireland under fascism

This Booker-longlisted dystopia with shades of Cormac McCarthy is nightmarish yet horribly convincing


Booker prize reveals ‘original and thrilling’ 2023 longlist




Melissa Harrinson
Tuesday 31 August 2023


T

he Irish offspring of The Handmaid’s Tale and Nineteen Eighty-Four, Paul Lynch’s Booker-longlisted fifth novel is as nightmarish a story as you’ll come across: powerful, claustrophobic and horribly real. From its opening pages it exerts a grim kind of grip; even when approached cautiously and read in short bursts it somehow lingers, its world leaking out from its pages like black ink into clear water.

Thursday, December 24, 2020

Summerwater by Sarah Moss review / A dark holiday in Scotland


BOOKS OF THE YEAR

Summerwater by Sarah Moss review – a dark holiday in Scotland

Everyone is hiding something and the rain won’t stop in the Ghost Wall writer’s nightmarish tale of a day spent holidaying by a loch


Melissa Harrinson

Wed 26 August 2020

 

L

ike a dim shape shifting in the depths of a loch, there is something very dark at work just out of sight in Sarah Moss’s seventh novel. Its title is a reference to “The Ballad of Semerwater” by the poet William Watson, itself based on a legend in which the waters of a lake rise up and drown a village, sparing only the household who have offered a stranger from a distant land food and drink.