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Close to Home Michael Magee

Close to Home By Michael Magee

Close to Home by Michael Magee


£11.79
New RRP £14.99
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Close to Home Summary

Close to Home by Michael Magee

Luminous and devastating, a portrait of modern masculinity as shaped by class, by trauma, and by silence, but also by the courage to love and to survive

Sean's brother Anthony is a hard man. When they were kids their ma did her best to keep him out of trouble but you can't say anything to Anto. Sean was supposed to be different. He was supposed to leave and never come back.

But Sean does come back. Arriving home after university, he finds Anthony's drinking is worse than ever. Meanwhile the jobs in Belfast have vanished, Sean's degree isn't worth the paper it's written on and no one will give him the time of day. One night he loses control and assaults a stranger at a party, and everything is tipped into chaos.

Close to Home witnesses the aftermath of that night, as Sean attempts to make sense of who he has become, and to reckon with the relationships that have shaped him, for better and worse.

Drawing from his own experiences, Michael Magee examines the forces which keep young working class men in harm's way, in a debut novel which shines with intelligence and humanity on every page. Close to Home is an extraordinary work of fiction about deciding what kind of a man you want to be and finding your place in the scarred city you call home.

Close to Home Reviews

An exceptional debut destined for novel of the year shortlists * Martin Doyle, Irish Times *
How beautifully Magee has brought his characters to life, and how intricately he has created their world... It's impressive work: modest, subtle, even austere; but unmistakeably, thrillingly alive * Irish Independent (Kevin Power) *
Lucid and stirring... Mgaee's persistently evocative and beautifully matter-of-fact descriptions of Belfast's landmarks and people are intertwined with a sensitive awareness of the city's social, political and religious history: you can almost hear the balls clattering into one another in the snooker halls and the drum of techno in the nightclubs... Generational divides, as well as class and religious differences, are channelled through the vulnerable narrative voice of an individual seeking to understand his own masculinity and place within his family * Literary Review *
Magee is his own man in his restrained approach... I took Sean to my heart and the last line of the book left me with a satsifying shiver * The Times (John Self) *
The best debut I've read in years - a tender examination of class, masculinity and place -- Nicole Flattery, author of 'Show Them A Good Time'
A vision of a post-conflict Belfast that didn't deliver what it promised, blighted by poverty, pain and memory. But far from being bleak, I laughed out loud many times. And it is full of love. Each character is so vividly drawn that I felt like I had met them somewhere before; even the most flawed of them is treated with dignity and respect, and an absence of judgement that reminded me of Annie Ernaux. And the writing! Supple, rich and demotic - Kneecap meets Chekhov - no one else is doing this. I had great hopes for this novel and Michael Magee has booted it out of the park. Absolutely glorious. -- Louise Kennedy, author of 'Trespasses'
Beautifully observed and sharp as a knife tip - as real and as raw as the truths you tell on a comedown, in the early hours, in the darkness of some stranger's house. Deeply affecting and badly needed, this is a novel I will be thinking about for a long time -- Lisa McInerney, author of 'The Glorious Heresies'
Wonderful. A debut overflowing with years of experience and carefully worked craft. By turns hard-edged and soft-hearted, this novel is a gift from Michael Magee to us all -- Jon McGregor, author of 'Reservoir 13'
Michael Magee's first novel is superb. An emotionally true, keenly observed book that goes deep into the troubled territory of home, family and friendship, returning with a message of love -- David Hayden, author of 'Darker With The Lights On'
As beautiful as it is brilliant. Reading Close to Home is like crossing a frontier into a new and thrilling territory -- Glenn Patterson, author of 'The International'
Close To Home announces an exciting new voice - at once open and wary, tender and unyielding - and sharply alive to the pains and discoveries and mysteries of youth -- Colin Barrett, author of 'Young Skins'
Ringing out clear and true as a bell, it gleams with tenderness and perception. There are few narrators so unassuming and unaffected, yet so full of sharp intelligence -- Wendy Erskine, author of 'Dance Move'
Close to Home does for Belfast what Shuggie Bain did for Glasgow. Its portrayal of a particular kind of masculinity - self-destructive and romantic by turns - is unsparing, funny and desperately sad. Keep an eye on Michael Magee; he's the real deal. -- Patrick Gale, author of 'A Place Called Winter'
A sharp and humane novel about a young man, and a city, caught in the painful throes of reimagining themselves. It rings with authenticity, and the wisdom of hard-won observation and experience - a hymn to the ways in which art can be a lifeline and an escape. Michael Magee's debut is an important addition to the burgeoning new canon of Belfast literature -- Lucy Caldwell, author of 'These Days'
Compulsively readable - you will need to know how this ends! -- Emilie Pine, author of 'Notes to Self'
Precise, compulsive, companionable and genuinely moving. Michael Magee writes a world we see far too little of in contemporary literature. We need books like this -- Sean Hewitt, author of 'All Down Darkness Wide'
Sharp, immediate, beautiful writing. A vivid portrait of modern Belfast and of how our circumstances shape our lives. Every character is drawn with nuance and complexity, with great precision and attention to detail. I really loved this book -- Rachel Connolly, author of 'Lazy City'
Artfully crafted, compassionate, precise and unafraid. I loved this book -- Susannah Dickey, author of 'Common Decency'
A lyrical examination of masculinity, class, and poverty. Magee's prose sings with the tenderness of a writer beyond his years * Electric Literature *

About Michael Magee

Michael Magee is the fiction editor of The Tangerine and a graduate of the PhD Creative Writing programme at Queen's University, Belfast. His writing has appeared in Winter Papers, The Stinging Fly, The Lifeboat and in The 32: An Anthology of Working Class Writing. Close to Home is his first novel.

Additional information

NGR9780241582978
9780241582978
0241582970
Close to Home by Michael Magee
New
Hardback
Penguin Books Ltd
2023-04-06
288
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

Customer Reviews - Close to Home