Ian McGuire follows The North Water with this impressively researched, utterly brilliant, tautly plotted, historical noir, a tense thriller set amidst the fraught, deadly arena of the savage, no holds barred war between the British and the underground fight by the Irish for Independence in the 19th century, set in the dirt and grime of Manchester and America. Three Irishmen have been hanged, their deaths bestowing them with a martyrdom to the Irish community that serves as a rallying call for vengeance. James O'Connor has relocated to Manchester from Ireland for a new, more sober beginning, working with the police to quash any Fenian plots, although being Irish, he attracts little in the way of respect, liking or trust.
O'Connor runs informers and spies in the Irish community and rumours begin to reach him of a scarred man of interest. Hard man Stephen Doyle is an Irish American veteran of the civil war who steps off the boat into the city of Manchester, stepping off the same boat is O' Connor's nephew, 19 year old Michael Sullivan looking for work. Doyle and O'Connor circle each other as Doyle looks to pull off an audacious reckoning, a battle into which young Sullivan is drawn into. In the most thrilling and suspenseful of narratives, we learn of the past histories of the two men, the tragedies that O'Connor could hardly bear, his struggles with the demon drink, and a life spiralling out of his control that led to his deployment in Manchester, and the backstory, violence and events that shaped the brutal man that is Doyle .
O'Connor ends up going to America, the conclusion of the novel the most surprising, almost completely out of the blue, gut wrenching, bleakest and shell shock of a ending. McGuire's powerful, vivid, convincing storytelling of retribution is never less than compulsive, gripping the reader by the throat, with events and a dynamics that echo the nature of British history with the Irish. There are times when it feels so loaded, even overloaded with tension, this is a period historical thriller that packs one hell of a punch, a punch that is likely to leave an indelible mark on the reader. Highly recommended. Many thanks to Simon and Schuster for an ARC.