'Lynch has a sensational gift ... inherited from the likes of Cormac McCarthy, Sebastian Barry and Daniel Woodrell. He is a writer to watch out for, staking a bid for a territory all his own' Colum McCann.

Colum McCann

'Classic storytelling, rough and haunted people and the times that made them, powerfully conjured, written in language that demands attention. Lynch is bardic, given to sly and inspired word selections, with his own sprung rhythms and angled, stark musicality' Daniel Woodrell.

Daniel Woodrell

'A compulsive read ... will attract attention for its singular language - a combination of the poetic and the vicious - as well as for its shocking subject matter' <i>Irish Times</i>.

Irish Times

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'A compulsive read ... A combination of the poetic and the vicious. It unabashedly uses a 21st century sensibility to subvert the conventions of the 'historical' novel' <i>Irish Times</i>.

Irish Times

'This book makes the literary synapses spark and burn ... A signal masterpiece' Sebastian Barry.

Sebastian Barry

'Lynch's startling, evocative prose veers closer to poetry ... This novel is a wonderful achievement' <i>Sunday Times</i>.

Sunday Times

'Lynch's book is a beautifully etched and colourfully told drama' <i>Sunday Business Post</i> (Dublin).

Sunday Business Post (Dublin)

BY THE AUTHOR OF THE BOOKER PRIZE LONGLISTED PROPHET SONG.

'Paul Lynch is peerless' Donal Ryan, author of Strange Flowers

Spring 1832: Donegal, north west Ireland.

Coll Coyle wakes to a blood dawn and a day he does not want to face. The young father stands to lose everything on account of the cruel intentions of his landowner's heedless son.

Although reluctant, Coll sets out to confront his trouble. And so begins his fall from the rainsoaked, cloud-swirling Eden, and a pursuit across the wild bog lands of Donegal.

Behind him is John Faller - a man who has vowed to hunt Coll to the ends of the earth - in a pursuit that will stretch to an epic voyage across the Atlantic, and to greater tragedy in the new American frontier.

Red Sky in Morning is a dark tale of oppression bathed in sparkling, unconstrained imagery. A compassionate and sensitive exploration of the merciless side of man and the indifference of nature, it is both a mesmerizing feat of imagination and a landmark piece of fiction.

Read more
Ireland, 1832 - a hunted farmer is forced to swap dew-drenched Donegal for the sun-soaked American northeast, while his cruel pursuer vows a bloody revenge...

Product details

ISBN
9781780879192
Published
2014
Publisher
Quercus Publishing; riverrun
Weight
194 gr
Height
196 mm
Width
128 mm
Thickness
22 mm
Age
00, G, 01
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
272

Author

Biographical note

Paul Lynch was born in 1977 and lives in Dublin. He was the chief film critic of Ireland's Sunday Tribune newspaper from 2007-2011. He has written regularly for the Sunday Times on film and has also written for the Irish Times, the Sunday Business Post, the Irish Daily Mail and Film Ireland. Red Sky in Morning is his first novel.