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When Drew Linden’s new job brings him back to his native Belfast, he is determined to remain distant from everything that once tied him there, including his friends and family.
But as three generations of family history unfold, it becomes clear that the past Drew has been running from is the very thing he needs to face. And that his sense of self is rooted forever in the troubled city of his birth.
‘told with grace, with warmth and ineffable lightness by a writer in full love and knowledge of his city’
Robert McLiam Wilson
‘humane, wise, funny, absolutely contemporary’
Guardian
‘unmistakably authentic’
Observer
‘A triumph. Maybe the finest novel written out of Ulster in twenty-five years.’
Scotland on Sunday
350 pages, Kindle Edition
First published February 20, 1992
In time, though, with Hugh's departure for London, Melanine began to suspect that this pose of ironic detachment only masked an obsession with origins as unsound in its way as anything that the extremists in all their blinkered bigotry could conjure up, and that the Expats had become just a name to gather under to drink Guinness and feel the tragedy of their birth. To hear them talk about the place now, even to traduce it, you'd have thought it was somewhere else, the centre of the significant universe. Not a misshapen little jug of a country teetering on the brink of a continental shelf: one ten-thousandth of the earth's surface.