Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2025
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12. A book by an Irish author
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This book as been on my TBR the longest of any other.
These Days - Lucy Caldwell
Just bought this year.
A Ladder to the Sky - John Boyne
Have wanted to read this since I loved his book, The Heart's Invisible Furies






I’ve read a lot of great Irish authors the last couple years - Maggie O'Farrell, Sally Rooney, Jo Spain, Sara Baume - so I don’t have a lot left on my bookshelves. One of my remaining options is The House of Ashes by Stuart Neville.



My other option would've been This Charming Man by C.K. McDonnell, who is the only other Irish author I think I've got on my TBR.

Also, if anyone likes sick and twisted (but well-written), I can recommend In the Forest by Edna O'Brien.

Thank you! It's a Bucket List check off for both of us and we are so excited!


I Am, I Am, I Am: Seventeen Brushes with Death by Maggie O’Farrell
The Heart's Invisible Furies by John Boyne
When All Is Said by Anne Griffin
A Ladder to the Sky by John Boyne
Several books by Maeve Binchy
My top choices for 2025:
Prophet Song by Paul Lynch - Booker, Dayton Peace Prize
This Is Happiness by Niall Williams
History of the Rain by Niall Williams
A Week in Winter by Maeve Binchy
Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha by Roddy Doyle


The Coast Road
Night Swimmers (can also be used for waves on the cover prompt).


Based on your recommendation at some other time, I picked up the first book in the series to read for this The Ruin
I'm also a big fan of Graham Norton and his fiction is actually quite good! I've read Holding, Home Stretch, A Keeper, and have Forever Home yet to read.

Hey - that's really cool! I hope you enjoy it.

The second is a young adult book and the first is most definitely adult, but both are really about friendship in difficult times.

Godwin by Joseph O'Neill - 4* - My Review
Joseph O'Neill was born in Cork, Ireland.


And then I went boring and picked The Pilgrim's Regress by C.S. Lewis

I read Time of the Child by Niall Williams.
This was an unusual experience for me. I went from almost DNFing this book, to giving it 5 stars! What allowed me to get into the book was moving from print to audio. This is very unlike me as I usually can mostly only do audio if it's a memoir read by the author. This book is SO poetic and descriptive that the print version was putting me to sleep (15 pages on just leaving church after the service?). But with the beautiful narration that benefitted from an Irish lilt, I was firmly in the setting and able to feel all the warmth of the story.
Any initial downgrading of rating of this book was solely based on the fault of this reader. Even though I usually prefer character driven books over plot heavy books, this book was so character driven (you might even call it Setting Driven?) that I just needed to learn how to relax into enjoying "the view" and not worry too much about what comes next.

Books mentioned in this topic
These Days (other topics)Time of the Child (other topics)
The Pilgrim's Regress (other topics)
The Picture of Dorian Gray (other topics)
Godwin (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
C.S. Lewis (other topics)Joseph O'Neill (other topics)
Shirley-Anne McMillan (other topics)
Roddy Doyle (other topics)
Graham Norton (other topics)
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A few links to seek inspiration:
Irish Literature genre page: /genres/iris...
Best Irish Literature: /list/show/6...
Female Irish Authors: /list/show/1...
Irish YA: /list/show/1...
Irish Crime Fiction: /list/show/1...
ATY Listopia: /list/show/2...
What are you reading this week? What Irish authors can you recommend?