![]() ![]() ![]() This article is taken from The Big Issue magazine. ![]() You can buy The Queen of Dirt Island from The Big Issue shop on, which helps to support The Big Issue and independent bookshops. Patrick Maxwell is a writer and journalist There is a real vein of self-pity throughout this novel: Republican terrorists are treated as victims and disaster is piled on affected disaster to make it seem realistic. It is almost an affecting novel, yet it seems made too much of effects, of endearing phrases and a placid obscurity of time and place. The Queen of Dirt Island takes us to rural Ireland and the enveloping disgraces and disasters of Saoirse Aylward as she grows up without a father and a religious ethic doomed to corruption by the farmers and schoolboys all around her. ![]() Donal Ryan may explain the trend: his laconic prose, the episodic structure, the pastoral descriptions, the constant sources of tragedy and the silent, morose central characters through whose tinted lens we get a glimpse of their world. Something is going on in Irish fiction which has beguiled and enchanted British readers over the last decade. The Queen of Dirt Island by Donal Ryan is out on August 18 (Doubleday, £14.99) ![]()
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