Eva and her son Torin have to leave London and move back to Ireland. Eva to find the daughter she left behind and Torin from a life that was threatening his freedom. It is about dislocation and becoming unanchored and the need for a home and belonging and the disturbance when you're wrenched out of your environment.
A well-written book about belonging. Torin is in all kinds of trouble, so his mother takes him from London to rural Ireland to escape. She becomes more at home whilst he struggles to belong.
Torin struggles to connect with anyone around him whilst the weight of what might be going on in London still holds over him. We see his development through many well-written chapters, but each scene stands alone. It felt like there were so many opportunities to develop other characters or the relationships between them.
Beautifully grim story of a young man learning who he is in the world. Set amongst traveler communities Shanahan describes the country lovingly even when its harshness bites. Torin will haunt me for a while I think.
This, another of my Blue Moose book-token, punts, told a story that hooked me, and kept me reading, despite my feeling it over-did the forewarnings and took longer to tell than was necessary. That said, it effectively evoked the several locations and the ending felt finely judged.
Really weird book, just happy it’s finished. Think I only carried on reading because the girl was called Caitlin other than it just felt really pointless. I liked the idea of the story and loved it being set in Ireland I also love how Liverpool was mentioned a few times (even though it was only brief). But other than that I didn’t like it.
I hate leaving negative reviews but I really did not enjoy this at all and the ending was so up in the air. Like did they carry on a relationship even though they’re siblings? What happened to the grandad and delia?
I also feel like this any bad thing this author could think of she was just like ‘yeah I’ll add that in’. It was literally one thing after the other. Like what did it to the story to kill the horse off? What was the whole Pauley bit at the end with him being all banged up because he fell out a window but also seemed fine at the party with Torin.
I came into this book clueless and I’m leaving clueless. I just didn’t get it. It kinda felt like a chore reading it and I hate that because reading usually gives me so much joy and this just sucked the life out of me.
This is probably one of the harshest reviews I have and probably ever will write and I feel awful but it’s just one of them I guess 😬.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.