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The Blood Miracles :the addictive, high-octane sequel to Women's Prize for Fiction-winning The Glorious Heresies

The Blood Miracles

The Blood Miracles :the addictive, high-octane sequel to Women's Prize for Fiction-winning The Glorious Heresies

paperback
Published: 1 February, 2018
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Description

'If you like Trainspotting, Peaky Blinders, Guy Ritchie and Quentin Tarantino then this rackety, kinetic, hold-your-attention at gunpoint book for you' THE TIMES

'Devastatingly brilliant' SALLY ROONEY


'Delectable and vigorously entertaining' IRISH INDEPENDENT

Like all twenty-year-olds, Ryan Cusack is trying to get his head around who he is.

This is not a good time for his boss to exploit his dual heritage by opening a new black market route from Italy to Ireland. It is certainly not a good time for his adored girlfriend to decide he's irreparably corrupted. And he really wishes he hadn't accidentally caught the eye of an ornery grandmother who fancies herself his saviour.

There may be a way clear of the chaos in the business proposals of music promoter Colm and in the attention of the charming, impulsive Natalie. But now that his boss's ambitions have rattled the city, Ryan is about to find out what he's made of, and it might be that chaos is in his blood.

Prizes

Winner of Encore Award 2018 (UK),Long-listed for Dylan Thomas Prize 2018 (UK)

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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781444798920
ISBN10 1444798928
Number Of Pages 304
Item Weight 220 g
Product Dimensions 128 x 196 x 22 mm
Publisher / Reseller John Murray Press
Format paperback
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Media Reviews

This summer I can wholeheartedly recommend Lisa McInerney's novel The Blood Miracles, the devastatingly brilliant follow-up to her prize-winning debut The Glorious Heresies. In my inexpert opinion, McInerney's hero Ryan Cusack is quickly becoming one of Irish fiction's iconic protagonists * Sally Rooney, Irish Times *
If you like Trainspotting, Peaky Blinders, Guy Ritchie and Quentin Tarantino then this is a rackety, kinetic, hold-your-attention-at-gunpoint book * The Times *
The narration is brisk and slick, the dialogue fizzing with acerbic wisecracking * Literary Review *
Lisa McInerney is a writer busily combining the traditions of hardcore Irish crime writing with the kind of fast-talking foul-mouthed wit and gentle good humour that readers will recall from the work of Roddy Doyle, and producing popular state-of-the-nation novels as a consequence * Times Literary Supplement *
An addictive read * Guardian *
Trainspotting meets Goodfellas . . . McInerney writes with delicious irreverence and her fiction in this book has a fast, filmic quality * Evening Standard *
McInerney writes with enviable verve, swagger and humour * Mail on Sunday *
Delectable and vigorously entertaining * Irish Independent *
Lively, entertaining, salty and funny * Irish Examiner *
Vivid, compelling and moving * Observer *
The plot's a slippery snake of dodgy deals and deadly double crosses, with a series of handbrake turns at the end. It's standard gangster stuff, spiked into originality by the chemical kick of McInerney's prose * The Spectator *
A hard-edged, gritty novel with terrific tempo and good characterisation . . . McInerney is a pacy storyteller at the top of her game * Daily Express *
Lisa McInerney is a preposterously gifted writer, Amis-like, almost Shakespearean, in her ability to riff, refresh and amuse * New Statesman *
An exuberant noirish romp that also speaks of the sad fallout of a loveless childhood * Financial Times *
An exuberant noirish romp that also speaks of a loveless childhood * Financial Times, Books of the Year *
The narration is brisk and slick, the dialogue fizzing with acerbic wisecracking * Literary Review *
Lisa Mcinerney is a writer busily combining the traditions of hardcore Irish crime writing with the kind of fast-talking foul-mouthed wit and gentle good humour that readers will recall from the work of Roddy Doyle, and producing popular state-of-the-nation novels as a consequence * Times Literary Supplement *
If you like Trainspotting, Peaky Blinders, Guy Ritchie and Quentin Tarantino then this is a rackety, kinetic, hold-your-attention-at-gunpoint book * The Times *
An addictive read * Guardian *
Trainspotting meets Goodfellas . . . McInerney writes with delicious irreverence and her fiction in this book has a fast, filmic quality * Evening Standard *
McInerney writes with enviable verve, swagger and humour * Mail on Sunday *
Delectable and vigorously entertaining * Irish Independent *
Lively, entertaining, salty and funny * Irish Examiner *
Vivid, compelling and moving * Observer *
The plot's a slippery snake of dodgy deals and deadly double crosses, with a series of handbrake turns at the end. It's standard gangster stuff, spiked into originality by the chemical kick of McInerney's prose * The Spectator *
A hard-edged, gritty novel with terrific tempo and good characterisation . . . McInerney is a pacy storyteller at the top of her game * Daily Express *
Lisa McInerney is a preposterously gifted writer, Amis-like, almost Shakespearean, in her ability to riff, refresh and amuse * New Statesman *
An exuberant noirish romp that also speaks of the sad fallout of a loveless childhood * Financial Times *
This summer I can wholeheartedly recommend Lisa McInerney's novel The Blood Miracles, the devastatingly brilliant follow-up to her prize-winning debut The Glorious Heresies. In my inexpert opinion, McInerney's hero Ryan Cusack is quickly becoming one of Irish fiction's iconic protagonists * Sally Rooney, Irish Times *
An exuberant noirish romp that also speaks of a loveless childhood * Financial Times, Books of the Year *

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GoodReads Reviews

Author's Bio

Lisa McInerney's work has featured in Winter Papers, Stinging Fly, Granta and on BBC Radio 4, and in the anthologies Beyond The Centre, The Long Gaze Back and Town and Country. Her debut novel, The Glorious Heresies, won the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction 2016 and the Desmond Elliott Prize. Her second novel, The Blood Miracles, was published by John Murray in April 2017.

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