Romalyn Ante’s AGIMAT longlisted for the inaugural Jhalak Poetry Prize

Author photo: S Chadawong

Congratulations to Romalyn Ante, whose second poetry collection AGIMAT (Chatto & Windus) has been longlisted for this year’s Jhalak Prize, celebrating the best book published in the UK and Ireland by a writer of colour. Previously shortlisted in 2021 for her debut collection ANTIEMETIC FOR HOMESICKNESS, Romalyn is this year recognised in the new category exclusively for poetry collections.

Other authors nominated for the longlist alongside Romalyn were Khairani Barokka, Azad Ashim Sharma, Mimi Khalvati, Claudine Toutoungi, Nisha Ramayya, Rushika Wick, Amaan Hyder, Raymond Antrobus, Tim Tim Cheng, Karen McCarthy Woolf and the late Gboyega Odubanjo. The poetry prize will be judged by Jason Allen-Paisant, Malika Booker and Will Harris, with the shortlist due to be announced on 22 April, followed by the winners on 4 June.

‘This longlist demands to be looked at,’ said the judges of the poetry prize in a press release. ‘These are twelve poetry books by writers of colour published at a time when fewer than 1% of students at GCSE level study a book by a writer of colour. These are books saying valuable things in unusual forms. Like all good poetry, each book is uniquely receptive to the speech of our time, finding out the spaces in language where ideology inserts itself and picking it apart.’

‘It is clear in the ninth year of the Jhalak Prize awards that the quality of work being produced by writers of colour in Britain and Ireland is extraordinary,’ said Prize founder Sunny Singh. ‘The judges for all three awards, including our inaugural Jhalak Poetry Prize, have struggled to select only twelve books for each longlist and have chosen them with immense care, difficulty and heartbreak for all the books that they could not include. These books do not flinch from the harsh realities of our histories, times and lives. Yet they are also books full of love, hope and joy.’

About AGIMAT:

this charms the buried light of stars –

this deflects bullets – this unblooms a war –

In some Filipino clans, parents pass down to each child an AGIMAT, an amulet, in the hope its magic will protect and empower them. In a world of daily pain and loss, Romalyn Ante’s second collection asks: how do we keep safe what we hold most dear?

At the dawn of the pandemic, the poet – a practising nurse in the NHS – is thrown onto the frontlines of the war against COVID-19. Past conflicts swim into the now. When she falls in love with a man of Japanese heritage, it forces a reckoning with her family’s suffering under Japan’s brutal wartime occupation of the Philippines. Elsewhere, we meet the irrepressible goddess Mebuyan, who, in Philippine myth, nurses the spirits of children in the underworld. Here, she watches over young people in crisis – a girl who can’t stop cutting herself, a teenager who has leapt from a railway viaduct.

These are poems of strength and solace; they question what it means to fight, and what it takes to heal.

Romalyn is currently writing her debut novel, THE LEFT-BEHIND CHILD, a lyrical and vivid depiction of childhood and rupture inspired by her and her mother’s stories of leaving the Philippines to work and care for others in the United Kingdom, which will be published by Chatto & Windus in Spring 2026.

About Romalyn Ante

Romalyn Ante FRSL is a British-Filipino poet, essayist, and editor. She grew up in the Philippines and migrated to her second home, Wolverhampton, in 2005.

She is co-founding editor of harana poetry, a magazine for poets who write in English as a second or parallel language, and the founder of Tsaá with Roma, an online interview series with poets and other creatives. She was awarded the Jerwood Compton Poetry Fellowship and she currently sits as an editorial board member for Poetry London magazine. 

She is the first East-Asian to win the Poetry London Prize (2018) and the Manchester Poetry Prize (2017). She also won the Creative Future Literary Award 2017.

Apart from being a writer, she also works as a specialist nurse practitioner. Her debut poetry collection, ANTIEMETIC FOR HOMESICKNESS, is published by Chatto & Windus and was an Irish Times Best Poetry Book of 2020, an Observer Poetry Book of the Month and a Poetry School Poetry Book of the Year 2020. It was also a National Poetry Day UK Recommended Read and was longlisted for the Jhalak Prize and the Dylan Thomas Prize.

 Praise for AGIMAT

‘In her spellbinding meditation on love and loss, hope is less “the thing with feathers” and more the thing with forceps… I felt grateful for the tender attention the poet affords to a hope that many of us hold dear: that as patients – that as people – we may amount to more than just flesh and bone. Thankfully, in the hands of Romalyn Ante the human self far exceeds statistics and the subtotal of all its scars.’ – Jade Cuttle, The Observer

‘Unflinching in detailing the physical and emotional exhaustion of [nursing], and also delivers deft political commentary… As she moves between the Philippines and the Midlands, and touches on her relationships with her family and partner, what unites the poems is her simple, beautiful language, and an awareness of the difficulty of healing.’ – Rishi Dastidar, ‘The Best Recent Poetry’, The Guardian

‘Ante is an alchemical wonder of a poet: unparalleled in her image-making, raw to both historical and contemporary damage and rich in cultures… Keep these poems with you as I will – always.’ – Fiona Benson

‘Romalyn Ante’s mesmeric new collection is deeply rooted in the dualities of life, cultural identity, and the profound interplay of personal and communal experience. Vivid, lyrical, and always surprising, it is a testament to those who navigate the complex legacies of history toward healing and resilience.’ – Nathan Filer

‘With precision, deftness, and at times playfulness, AGIMAT weaves in mythical and modern imageries, the universal with the intimate. The result is a powerful and hopeful collection, filled with heart and beauty, that illuminates us to the many forms that caring and healing can take.’ – Cecile Pin

Praise for Romalyn Ante

‘Captivating, playful, moving, witty and agile... an unforced poet with a lightness of touch and fortitude’ – The Guardian

‘Romalyn Ante is a poet to fall in love with’ – Liz Berry

‘Ante's poems are like embers, pared back to a slow-burning emotional core’ – Times Literary Supplement

Vist Romalyn’s website.

Follow Romalyn on X (previously Twitter) and Instagram. 

BOOKISH, a love letter to reading, by bestseller Lucy Mangan scooped up by Square Peg

Cover artwork by Abbey Lossing

Lucy Mangan, the beloved Guardian television critic and i newspaper columnist, will publish the next chapter of her life in reading, BOOKISH: How Reading Shapes Our Lives, with Vintage imprint Square Peg in 2025. Lucy’s co-agents, Juliet Pickering at Blake Friedmann and Louise Lamont at LBA Books, sold World English rights to Rowan Yapp, former publishing director, with Square Peg Publishing Director Marianne Tatepo steering the project to the bookshelves. The book will publish in hardback, eBook & audiobook – narrated by Lucy herself – on 13 March 2025.

BOOKISH is the highly anticipated sequel to BOOKWORM, Lucy’s popular memoir about childhood reading that was shortlisted for a Books Are My Bag Award. In this new book, Mangan charts how books of all kinds delight, guide, comfort and strengthen us throughout our adult lives. Revisiting the books of all genres – from thrillers and bonkbusters to historical sagas and apocalyptic zombie stories – that ferried her through each important stage of life, BOOKISH is a coming-of-age via reading. It's an ode to our favourite bookish spaces – from the smallest second-hand bookstalls to libraries, glorious big bookshops and our very own favourite book places – and explores how books help us connect with the people we love through shared stories.

‘To be writing about reading again is a joy I'm quite sure I have not earned, but have loved every minute of it anyway,’ said Lucy. ‘I can only thank Vintage from the bottom of my bookcase for the opportunity. I hope that readers enjoy meeting old friends within its covers and maybe making new ones too.’

‘We can think of no better advocate for reading – and hoarding – books than pathological tsundoku Lucy Mangan,’ Marianne Tatepo, Publishing Director of Square Peg, added. ‘Equal parts hilarious and generous, Lucy’s chronicles show how books of all stripes can be an escape, a comfort, a catalyst – changing people, and lives. BOOKISH is also a paean to the people who make reading possible for the many: the librarians, teachers and educators who instil a passion for words in communities even as accessibility is under threat. This book has a special place in our hearts – we cannot wait to share it with the many who loved and championed BOOKWORM; and bookish people everywhere.’

Juliet Pickering and Louise Lamont said: ‘Like a long, satisfying chat with your best friend, BOOKISH is a warm and wonderful tribute to the power of stories in the most befuddling of times, steering Lucy and the reader through our main adult milestones: love, sex, marriage, parenthood and grief, and making an irresistible case for handing our love of books on to generations to come. Anyone who loves reading will find deep joy – and some heartbreak – in these pages.’

Image: Stylist Magazine

About Lucy Mangan

Lucy Mangan is a journalist and columnist. She was educated in Catford and Cambridge; she studied English at the latter and then spent two years training as a solicitor, but left as soon as she qualified and went to work much more happily in a bookshop instead. She got a work experience placement at the Guardian in 2003 and hung around until they gave her a job.  Lucy is now TV critic at the Guardian, and a columnist for The i newspaper. She has written for most of the major women's magazines, including Grazia, Cosmopolitan, and Stylist. She was named Columnist of the Year at the PPA Awards in 2013.

In 2009, a collection of her columns from the Guardian was published as MY FAMILY AND OTHER DISASTERS. Her other works include HOPSCOTCH AND HANDBAGS: The Essential Guide to Being a Girl, a book about the experience of growing up in 80s suburbia, and THE RELUCTANT BRIDE, the lightly-fictionalised story of her wedding. INSIDE CHARLIE’S CHOCOLATE FACTORY, a commemoration of 50 years of Roald Dahl's CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY, was published by Puffin UK/US in 2014.

Lucy's memoir BOOKWORM, a personal history and celebration of children’s literature, was published by Vintage in March 2018. Her debut novel ARE WE HAVING FUN YET? was published by Profile Books in October 2021.

She lives in London with one husband, one son, two cats and fourteen double-stacked Billy bookcases.

Praise for Lucy Mangan’s BOOKISH

‘A bookworm’s delight. A delightful whistle stop tour through some books I’ve loved all my life as well as books I discovered through reading it. I devoured this book.’ – Sara Collins

‘Comforting, funny and moving – BOOKISH is wonderful to curl up with on good days and bad.’ – Sali Hughes

Praise for Lucy Mangan’s BOOKWORM

‘In Lucy Mangan’s BOOKWORM childhood books are brought vividly to life, as are the remembered pleasures of first encountering them… Mangan guides us along her bursting childhood shelves… It’s a delightfully cheerful and humorous romp through children’s literature.’ – Harriet Baker, Times Literary Supplement

‘In her joyful memoir BOOKWORM Lucy Mangan revisits our most beloved childhood books, brings the characters of our collective childhood back to life and uses them – with great wit and wisdom – to tell her own story. Wonderful.’ – Nina Stibbes, The Observer

‘This is THE most wonderful, funny, clever, charming, evocative book’ – India Knight

‘A wonderful romp through the pages of childhood, illuminated by wisdom, humour and enthusiasm.’ – Bernard Cornwell

‘Anyone who has ever preferred books to life will recognise Lucy Mangan as a kindred spirit. Her moving, funny, honest and superbly-written memoir about how childhood reading shapes our personalities, memories and chances could not be more timely or more needed in an age of library closures, embattled Humanities teaching and Philistinism.’ – Amanda Craig

‘She understands how books become entwined in our lives and help us make sense of the world. You don’t need to have enjoyed the same books as she has to recognise the pure, life-affirming joy of reading that BOOKWORM celebrates’ – Observer

Visit Lucy Mangan's website here

 Follow Lucy on Twitter

Joseph O’Connor’s MY FATHER’S HOUSE takes the Number One spot in Ireland

The powerful new literary thriller from bestselling author Joseph O’Connor, MY FATHER’S HOUSE, has flown straight to the Number One spot on the Irish bestseller chart after its first three days on sale. The novel is published by Harvill Secker in the United Kingdom and Ireland and is also just published in the US by Europa Editions. Two launch events for MY FATHER’S HOUSE took place this month, the first hosted at the Irish Embassy in London, featuring a Q&A between Andrew Holgate and Joseph O’Connor, and the second at the Pavilion Theatre in Dublin.

The audio edition features an exhilarating cast of narrators and UK-based listeners can also hear the Book at Bedtime abridgement of MY FATHER’S HOUSE, running over ten episodes on BBC Radio 4 over the next week, with catch-up possible on BBC Sounds: https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m001hp16

The first in a trilogy, MY FATHER’S HOUSE takes place in September 1943, while German forces occupy Rome and SS officer Paul Hauptmann rules with terror. An Irish priest, Hugh O'Flaherty, dedicates himself to helping those escaping from the Nazis. His home is Vatican City, a neutral, independent country within Rome where the occupiers hold no sway. He gathers a team to set up an Escape Line. But Hauptmann's net begins closing in and the need for a terrifyingly audacious mission grows critical. By Christmas, it's too late to turn back. Based on a true story, MY FATHER’S HOUSE is an unforgettable novel of love, sacrifice and what it means to be human in the most extreme circumstances.

MY FATHER’S HOUSE has been published to huge acclaim. Peter Kemp in the Sunday Times describes it as ‘a spectacular, thrilling novel… [which] celebrates triumphant against-the-odds camaraderie’ while Sarah Gilmartin in the Irish Times says it’s ‘a riveting tale about the power of community in the face of unfathomable evil… a seamless blend of fact and fiction by a master of the genre; a brisk polyphonic narrative that brings the heroism of ordinary people thrillingly to life.’ In the US, Martin Kemp says in the Washington Post that Joseph O’Connor brings Hugh O’Flaherty ‘vividly to life… His cat-and-mouse game with Hauptmann is expertly plotted; his desperate mission through the streets of Rome is brilliantly paced. It is hard not to be captivated by his presence throughout this hugely satisfying book, from its explosive opening to its bittersweet end.’ Further praise can be found below.

Last year, Joseph won the AWB Vincent American Ireland Fund Literary Award, one of Ireland’s most illustrious literary prizes given each year to a ‘promising or established writer in Ireland who best reflects the Irish literary tradition’. His previous novel, SHADOWPLAY, won Eason Novel of the Year Award 2019 and was shortlisted for Novel of the Year at the Dalkey Literary Awards 2020, the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year Award 2020, the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2020, the Jean Monnet Prize 2020, the RTE Radio 1 Listeners’ Choice Award 2019, Book of the Year Award at the An Post Irish Book Awards 2019, the Costa Novel Award 2019, and the Polari Prize 2020.

Praise for MY FATHER’S HOUSE

‘A spectacular, thrilling novel… the novel offers much more than tensely plotted thrills. O’Flaherty’s deep and impressively detailed love of Rome is emphasised and handsomely conveyed by O’Connor, who shares his responsiveness to its majestic and crumbled splendours, and its “painter’s palette… of burnished pinks, old copper, walnut, honey, ivory, mocha”. Dawn is watched “purpling” statues on its church rooftops… MY FATHER’S HOUSE celebrates triumphant against-the-odds camaraderie. It would require a present-day Puccini to do operatic justice to its tremendous tale.’ – Peter Kemp, The Sunday Times

‘O’Connor’s imagining of the characters’ thoughts helps bring them to life, but he also allows himself to trade on what happened while improving it as suits his dramatic purposes. This remains a tale worth re-telling, adorned as it is by the brilliants of O’Connor’s impressionistic writing.’ – James Owen, The Times, ‘The best new thrillers for January 2023’

‘Confrontational dialogue is one of O’Connor’s great strengths, and the scenes in which O’Flaherty and Hauptmann give battle crackle… the diverse ventriloquism of O’Connor’s novel evokes a city in peril with wonderful vitality.’ – Luke Brown, The Financial Times

‘Joseph O’Connor’s new novel my father’s house is a riveting tale about the power of community in the face of unfathomable evil… a seamless blend of fact and fiction by a master of the genre; a brisk polyphonic narrative that brings the heroism of ordinary people thrillingly to life... Historical details are scattered like gems throughout my father's house… Where my father's house really shines is in O'Connor's assembly of the material and his ventriloquistic way with voice. From the map of Rome and the Vatican at the beginning that locates the action, to the classical three-act structure, to a central narrative that moves forward in time over one momentous day, there is a clear sense of authority, a composer at work. In the hands of a less experienced writer, the many metafictional devices – unpublished memoirs, letters, transcripts from BBC interviews, among others – could confuse or detract from the story. O’Connor keeps an admirable command of the various strains and voices, some fictional, others, such as the British diplomat Sir D’Arcy Osborne, drawn from reality… O’Connor is a visualist who revels in evocative cityscapes of a Rome under siege… readers will be too caught up in O’Connor’s writing, the delight in watching a plan come together, the tension of wondering whether it will succeed… MY FATHER’S HOUSE, the first in a trilogy, is a novel full of deft characterisation and knowledge, not just the historical facts, but the broader – grander? – wisdom to be found in excavating the past.’ – Sarah Gilmartin, The Irish Times

‘The novel’s evocative scene-setting, its propulsive narration and its powerful depiction of bravery and unity in extremis, all make for an engrossing read.’ – Houman Barekat, The Telegraph

‘Joseph O’Connor’s latest novel, My Father’s House, begins with a potent blend of excitement, suspense, and intrigue. After making his mark with his grand entrance, O’Connor’s priest goes on to steal many more scenes by showing not just the courage of his convictions but also courage under fire. The result is a gripping World War II-set drama featuring the unlikeliest of heroes, one whom the reader roots for every step of the way. For a while, the book feels like an ensemble piece. However, O’Flaherty (or as May calls him, “Hughdini”) emerges as the star of the show. O’Connor brings vividly to life a man who, despite his calling, stands up to be counted after witnessing Nazi atrocities. His cat-and-mouse game with Hauptmann is expertly plotted; his desperate mission through the streets of Rome is brilliantly paced. It is hard not to be captivated by his presence throughout this hugely satisfying book, from its explosive opening to its bittersweet end.’ – Malcolm Forbes, The Washington Post

‘If the story were told in typical thriller style, emphasizing action over language, it would still be good, but O’Connor’s phrasings are a special joy… A deeply emotional read. And when the action is over, the coda could water an atheist’s eye.’ – Kirkus Reviews

‘There have been many books written and films made about Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty, the Kerry-born Vatican priest who rescued thousands of Jews and Allied Prisoners of War during the Second World War. But his latest incarnation, as the hero of this fast-moving novel by Joseph O’Connor, is surely the most memorable… The use of so many different voices, more suited to the gentler pace of literary fiction, is a risky technique for a thriller writer, relying on the reader’s willingness to get to know each new character in turn, hence the description “literary thriller”. Only a highly skilled writer could carry it off, but it is no problem to Joseph O’Connor… a novel that triumphantly recreates the extraordinary human being that was Monsignor Hugh O’Flaherty and his colourful co-conspirators.’ – Alannah Hopkin, Irish Examiner

‘Superb’ – Madeleine Keane, Irish Independent

‘The overall tone of Mr. O’Connor’s new novel, MY FATHER’S HOUSE is, by contrast, more urgent than elegiac, and its suspenseful plot has little time for bittersweet rumination… All of which Mr. O’Connor re-creates with consummate skill while painting a subtle portrait of an erudite scholar who was also a defi ant and formidable man of action… There is a boyish gusto in the staccato style he employs when describing a rescue being planned, for example, or a daring mission being executed… For all its thrills, however, MY FATHER’S HOUSE is primarily – and triumphantly – an intimate drama that illuminates both the fragility and the wonder of unlikely human connections forged in adversity and, in some cases, enduring for a lifetime.’ – Anna Mundow, The Wall Street Journal

‘O’Connor has a flair for spry historical fiction involving real-life figures… He’s on stellar form with this ensemble thriller… while the story’s inbuilt tension urges you on, it’s the sheer vigour of O’Connor’s beautifully turned phrases that really makes the book sing. Through the twists and turns, you feel in the safe hands of an expert story-teller dedicated to your pleasure… I can’t wait for part two.’ – Anthony Cummins, The Daily Mail

‘The riveting latest from O’Connor… Through wonderfully developed and varied characters, O’Connor conveys both the painful privations of life during wartime and the nobility of the Choir’s goals, and the unfolding of O’Flaherty’s marathon of undercover subterfuges that lay the groundwork for their mission in the middle section is a storytelling tour de force. This is top-drawer WWII fiction.’ – Publishers Weekly, starred review

‘A polyphonic retelling of how an Irish priest set out to rescue resistance fighters, PoWs and Jews from Nazi-occupied Rome… O’Connor rejects voyeurism or titillation. Violence is indirectly conveyed in the destruction of a fine piano, the appearance of a full set of teeth… O’Connor is playing with the possibilities of multiple narrators, and thinking also about plurality, reliability and the historical record: is a collection of witnesses more accurate than a solo narrator? … the final twist is satisfyingly theological.’ – Sarah Moss, The Guardian

‘MY FATHER’S HOUSE is a gripping, compelling and utterly brilliant read. O'Connor's gift for exquisite language shines through.’ – Liz Nugent

‘What a joy and privilege to be an early reader of a work of art from a towering figure in world literature. MY FATHER’S HOUSE is a masterwork. No writer in the world can tell a story the way Joseph O'Connor does. He can, without seeming effort, be all things to all readers, taking us by the hand and guiding us into the very heart of a story, his narrative techniques deployed with such unearthly skill that we're hardly aware that this was written at all, it feels so real, so urgent, so incredibly alive. This novel is a searing and beautiful example of storytelling's infinite importance, to our humanness, to our chances of learning from our most terrible and our most transcendent moments, and all our moments in between, to hold all life sacred, to see each other as brothers and sisters, to love and protect each other. No wonder he is so cherished and loved by his countless devotees across the earth. He is a national and international treasure, the most generous and noble of writers, a true master of the art.’ – Donal Ryan

‘I was utterly engrossed from start to finish. The writing hums with energy. Such a gloriously vivid depiction of a Rome that is both familiar and altogether strange. And a powerful story of ordinary humans showing extraordinary bravery and tenacity. Bravo!’ – Danielle McLaughlin

‘I can't begin to tell you how much I enjoyed MY FATHER’S HOUSE. Everything about it spoke to me. The characters, the location and the story itself. It is that rare thing, a literary page-turner. There were times when I was almost reading with my eyes closed because I couldn't handle the suspense! … O'Flaherty of course, is the star of the novel but he is probably upstaged just a little by Rome herself. Rome at such a difficult time in her history, bristling with fear and still full of beauty and courage. MY FATHER’S HOUSE is a terrific read and will stand among the best of World War 2 novels.’ – Christine Dwyer Hickey

‘Gripping… O’Connor is a masterful storyteller, weaving a violent, terrifying, suspenseful, yet ultimately uplifting story of one man’s courage and determination to fight back against Nazi brutality, whatever the risk. Superb!’ – Emily Melton, Booklist, Starred Review

‘Based on true events, this gripping narrative is rendered in beautifully evocative prose.’ – Simon Humphreys, Mail on Sunday

‘I cannot say enough good things about this World War II thriller... Readers will hold their breath if the Choir will fulfil their critical mission. It’s the first of a trilogy and a must read.’ – Elisa Shoenberger, Book Riot  

‘I am enjoying this hugely. It's a great story and a real page-turner, but Joe O'Connor is such a beautiful writer that you can't help stopping sometimes, just to savour the words… a wonderful book.’ – Kathleen Mac Mahon

‘Pacy well-crafted historical thriller... Building moment by moment to an almost unbearably tense climax, it is a gripping story of what it means to keep your humanity, even in the most extreme circumstances. Joseph O'Connor's books have long been favourites at Daunt Books and MY FATHER’S HOUSE does not disappoint.’ – Daunt Books newsletter, ‘Our five favourite books of the week’

 

About Joseph O’Connor

Joseph O’Connor was born in Dublin, where he still lives. MY FATHER’S HOUSE is his tenth novel: he is also the author of film scripts, radio and stage plays, two collections of short stories, and several bestselling works of non-fiction.

2022 was the 20th anniversary of Joseph O’Connor’s novel STAR OF THE SEA which was an international bestseller, selling more than a million copies in the UK alone and being published in 38 languages. It won France’s Prix Millepages, Italy’s Premio Acerbi, the Irish Post Award for Fiction, the Nielsen Bookscan Golden Book Award, an American Library Association Award, the Hennessy/Sunday Tribune Hall of Fame Award, and the Prix Litteraire Zepter for European Novel of the Year.

His novel GHOST LIGHT was chosen as Dublin’s One City Book novel for 2011. Published in 2019, SHADOWPLAY, has won him extraordinary praise, was shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize, The Dalkey Novel Prize, the Costa Novel Prize, among others, and won him Novel of the Year at the An Post Irish Book Awards. The French edition was shortlisted for the Jean Monnet Prize and the Vintage paperback was a Richard and Judy Winter 2020 pick.

He holds an honorary Doctorate in Literature from University College Dublin and received the Irish PEN Award for Outstanding Contribution to Irish Literature in 2012. He is the Inaugural Frank McCourt Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Limerick.

 

Visit Joseph O’Connor’s website

SHADOWPLAY SELECTED FOR RICHARD AND JUDY’S WINTER BOOK CLUB 2020

SHADOWPLAY pb front cover.JPG

Richard Madeley and Judy Finnigan yesterday launched their Christmas Book Club selections, exclusive to WH Smith. We are thrilled to announce that Joseph O’Connor’s magnificent novel SHADOWPLAY is one of Richard and Judy’s picks for Winter. Judy describes SHADOWPLAY as ‘a terrific book… dramatic, sad, but also richly funny… A truly great book you simply cannot put down’, whilst Richard says, ‘SHADOWPLAY is complex, rich, sad, funny, and a beautiful read. You’ll LOVE it.’ 

SHADOWPLAY was published in paperback this week by Vintage Books. WH Smith customers can enjoy exclusive special editions of the Book Club titles filled with added bonus content, including book club discussion points, author Q&As and more recommended reads.

London, 1878. Three extraordinary people begin their life together – and the idea for Dracula is born.

Fresh from life in Dublin, Bram Stoker – now manager of the Lyceum Theatre – is wrestling with dark demons in a new city, in a new marriage, and with his own literary aspirations. As he walks the streets at night, streets haunted by the Ripper and the gossip which swirls around his friend Oscar Wilde, he finds new inspiration. Soon, the eerie tale of Dracula begins to emerge.

But Henry Irving, volcanic leading man and impresario, is determined that nothing will get in the way of Bram’s dedication to the Lyceum. And both men are growing ever more enchanted by the beauty and boldness of Ellen Terry, the most celebrated actress of her generation.

Published in 2019, SHADOWPLAY, has garnered extraordinary praise, was a Sunday Times novel of the year and was shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize, the Dalkey and Costa Novel Prizes. SHADOWPLAY won Novel of the Year at the An Post Irish Book Awards. The superb audio edition, read by Barry McGovern and Anna Chancellor, is released by W.F. Howes in the UK and Dreamscape in the US. Europa published in the US, film rights are optioned and translation rights have been sold in eight translation markets so far: China (Shanghai Elegant People), Croatia (Fraktura), France (Editions Rivages), Hungary (Helikon), Italy (Guanda), Serbia (Carobna Knjiga), Sweden (Natur Och Kultur) and Turkey (Sia Kitap).The French edition was shortlisted for the Jean Monnet Prize.

About Joseph O’Connor
Joseph O’Connor was born in Dublin. He is the author of nine novels, two collections of short stories, and several bestselling works of non-fiction. He has also written film scripts and radio and stage-plays. His novel STAR OF THE SEA was an international bestseller, selling more than a million copies and being published in 38 languages. It won France’s Prix Millepages, Italy’s Premio Acerbi, the Irish Post Award for Fiction, the Nielsen Bookscan Golden Book Award, an American Library Association Award, the Hennessy/Sunday Tribune Hall of Fame Award, and the Prix Litteraire Zepter for European Novel of the Year.

He holds an honorary Doctorate in Literature from University College Dublin and received the Irish PEN Award for Outstanding Contribution to Irish Literature in 2012. He is the Inaugural Frank McCourt Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Limerick.

See Joseph O’Connor’s website here.

Praise for Joseph O’Connor and SHADOWPLAY

‘Ireland’s greatest storyteller.’ — The Sunday Independent

‘SHADOWPLAY totally swept me away . . . It’s a bit like Moulin Rouge meets Dracula. I absolutely loved it.”—Oliver Callan, Irish Examiner

‘Joseph O’Connor is a very great artist and storyteller. The quotient of enjoyment in his extraordinary new novel is stupendous.’ — Sebastian Barry

‘A vibrantly imaginative narrative of passion, intrigue and literary ambition.’ — Miranda Seymour, New York Times

‘Dazzling … The panache and subtlety of his prose perfectly match the gusto and creative finesse of the world his novel wonderfully evokes.’ – Peter Kemp, Sunday Times, Paperback of the Week

‘A colourful tale of secret love and public performance…in a romantic, lost London’ —The Times

‘A virtuoso act of literary ventriloquism. SHADOWPLAY is funny, smart, tender, wise and written with inch-perfect precision.’ – Colum McCann

‘A novel I’d recommend to anyone: a rollicking and moving story’ — James Naughtie, Radio Times

‘Ingenious…hugely impressive and utterly haunting’ — Sunday Mirror

‘An ambitious celebration of friendship, theatre and the power of darkness, SHADOWPLAY is chilling and dramatic in equal measure.’ — Jane Shilling, Daily Mail, Must Reads

‘A great writer performing Olympian literary storytelling.’ — Sir Bob Geldof

‘Subtly drawn and intensely affecting, this portrayal of accidental friendship, enduring love, frustrated ambition and the alchemy of acting …   O’Connor’s main characters—Stoker, Irving and the beloved actress Ellen Terry—are so forcefully brought to life that when, close to tears, you reach this drama’s final page, you will return to the beginning just to remain in their company.’ — Anna Mundow, Wall Street Journal