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Inch Levels

Hardback

Main Details

Title Inch Levels
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Neil Hegarty
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:320
Dimensions(mm): Height 228,Width 145
Category/GenreModern and contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
ISBN/Barcode 9781784975784
ClassificationsDewey:823.92
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Head of Zeus
Imprint Head of Zeus
Publication Date 8 September 2016
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

A haunting debut set in the harsh, beautiful landscape of Ireland's north coast. Patrick Jackson lies on his deathbed in Derry and recalls a family history marked by secrecy and silence, and a striking absence of conventional pieties. He remembers the death of an eight-year-old girl, whose body was found on reclaimed land called Inch Levels on the shoreline of Lough Swilly. And he is visited by his beloved but troubled sister Margaret and by his despised brother-in-law Robert, and by Sarah, his hard, unchallengeable mother. Each of them could talk about events in the past that might explain the bleakness of their relationships, but leaving things unsaid has become a way of life. Guilt and memory beat against them, as shock waves from bombs in Derry travel down the river to shake the windows of those who have escaped the city.

Author Biography

Neil Hegarty was born in Derry and studied English at Trinity College Dublin, receiving his PhD in 1998. He is the author of the authorised biography of David Frost and of The Story of Ireland. This is his first novel.

Reviews

'What Hegarty masterfully captures is a landscape and a community haunted, watched and revisited by ghosts' Anthony J. Quinn, Belfast Telegraph. 'A complex, multi-stranded narrative ... the reader is gripped by some masterfully handled storytelling ... We are taken down some very shadowy, and disturbingly familiar, avenues in our collective psyche' Irish Times Book Club. 'A beautifully judged account of the devastation that can occur when secrets rule our lives' Sue Leonard blog. 'Written in an eloquent voice, with gorgeous descriptions of the passing seasons, the landscape and the world beyond Patrick's hospital window' Reading Matters Blog. 'The tensions of blood relations, the wonders of our parents' lives before us and the ever-widening depths of bereavement are all explored here with a hypnotic vividness. From natural details to perfectly rendered thought and feeling, this is a triumphant book' A.L. Kennedy. 'An engaging novel which shows rather than tells, richly repaying close attention' A Life in Books. 'Moving, intimate ... an engrossing and enticing tale' Irish Examiner. 'Vividly evokes the wild beauty of the coastal landscape around Lough Swilly and reeled me in with its gradual revelation of family secrets' Danielle McLaughlin, Irish Times. 'The topography of the north-east plays a leading role in the novel, its ragged shoreline, the skerries and islets in foaming waves, silver scree, hillside bracken and heather, all form a stable background to Jackson's ephemeral memories ... There is much to ponder in this exploration of how we view the past' Sunday Independent. 'An ambitious and engrossing debut novel ... an intriguing blend of kidnap/murder mystery and fractured family history-fuelled drama infused with evocative descriptions ... not everyone can spin a yarn as well as Neil Hegarty' Irish News. 'Hegarty has a gift for lyrical description, and his authorial detachment adds to a pervading sense of bleakness' Daily Mail. 'Unsettling and thought-provoking, with just enough ambiguity and nuance to convince, this is a bold and well-crafted debut' Irish Times. 'A perceptive and moving study of remorse and resilience, of the legacy violence leaves behind, and of the intricacies of family life; in the world as Neil Hegarty conjures it, old secrets never die, and what's past is never past' John Banville.