Author: O'Brien, Edna
Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
Published on 20 November 2025 by FABER & FABER in the United Kingdom.
Paperback | 272 pages
128 x 198 x 19 | 222g
History is everywhere. It seeps into the soil, the sub-soil. Like rain, or hail, or snow, or blood.
Josie O'Grady is an elderly woman, living alone in her dilapidated big house on the outskirts of a rural Irish village. Then one day her bedroom door swings open to reveal McGreevy, an IRA terrorist on a bloody crusade, who has chosen her isolated house for sanctuary. As days pass, these two outsiders develop a grudging respect for each other, which grows into affection and friendship, but the police net is closing in and, with dawning horror, Josie starts to suspect that McGreevy is not only using her house as a refuge.
Based on interviews with the IRA leader Dominic McGlinchy in Portlaoise Prison and published four years before the Good Friday Agreement, this thrilling, political, poetic novel is a portrait of the state of the Irish nation at the height of the Troubles.