Paul Lynch was born in 1977 and lives in Dublin. He was the chief film critic of Ireland's Sunday Tribune newspaper from 2007-2011. He has written regularly for the Sunday Times on film and has also written for the Irish Times, the Sunday Business Post, the Irish Daily Mail, and Film Ireland. He is the author of Red Sky in Morning.
"Grace is a mesmerizing, incandescent work of art. Each exquisite
sentence binds its own separate spell. It's all things together,
but never lets its own weight be felt: a tragedy, an adventure, a
romance, a coming-of-age, a searing exposition of historical
truths; an interrogation of the nature of time and existence. Above
all and through all it's a perfect story, an exhilarating,
odyssean, heart-pounding, glorious story, wrought by a novelist
with the eye and the ear and the heart of an absolute master of his
trade. Paul Lynch is peerless. Grace Coyle, daughter of Coll, will
be one of the enduring heroines of world literature."
--Donal Ryan, author of The Spinning Heart
"Grace belongs to several great traditions--the picaresque novel,
the coming-of-age novel, and the orphan novel.... The familiar
world was made new, in the worst way, by the famine; Lynch makes it
new again by his prose.... Not surprisingly Grace is a relentless
novel, but Lynch allows his heroine a true complexity of feeling
that allows the reader to empathize even as we wring our hands.
Grace is not only a gripping tale about an appalling period in
history--although that would be quite enough--but also, sadly,
piercingly relevant."--Margot Livesey, Boston Globe
"Grace shares the linguistic virtuosity of Lynch's earlier
books.... But in these pages Lynch has deepened and refined his art
considerably--there are entire sections of the book that are
unforgettable.... Grace grows in narrative strength as it follows
Grace and Colly on their trek across an Ireland so emptied and
bewildered it might as well be some fantasy novel's
post-apocalyptic landscape."--Steve Donoghue, Open Letters
Monthly
"Grace is fierce wonder, a journey that moves with the same power
and invention as the girl at its center. What Paul Lynch brings to
these pages is more than mere talent-it's a searing commitment to
story and soul, and in witnessing Grace's transformations, one
can't help but feel changed too. This novel is faith, poetry,
lament, and triumph; its mark is not only luminous, but it promises
to never fade."
--Affinity Konar, author of Mischling
"Grace offers an intriguing perspective on the concepts of
femininity and hardship, one that feels as though it has already
claimed its place among great Irish literature."--Hope Racine,
BookPage
"A beautifully written novel, with a haunting story and deep echoes
of the Ancients."
--Edna O'Brien
"A gifted Irish author offers another take on his country's Great
Famine through the eyes of a teenage girl as she travels through a
land wracked by want.....This is a writer who wrenches beauty even
from the horror that makes a starving girl think her 'blood is
trickling over the rocks of my bones.'"--Kirkus Reviews (Starred
Review)
"A moving work of lyrical and at times hallucinatory beauty...
Grace reads like a hybrid of John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath
and Cormac McCarthy's The Road...Grace is a plucky, headstrong
survivor, and she survives a great deal in the course of this
book...There is an undercurrent of populist ire that resonates with
our own turbulent times...The readers of this novel will care a
great deal about the fates of Grace and her fellow
travelers."--John Michaud, The Washington Post
"A terrible beauty: Paul Lynch's Grace, a shudderingly
well-written, dead-real, hallucinatory trip across Famine
Ireland."--Emma Donoghue, author of The Wonder
"An epic tale of endurance, which in Lynch's deft hands is
harrowing and simultaneously starkly beautiful."--Angela
Ledgerwood, Esquire
"As a writer, Lynch is sui generis. His style is bold, grandiose,
mesmeric. He strives for large effects, wrestles with big ideas. In
Melville's formulation, he is one of those writers who dares "to
dive" into the darkest recesses of the soul, risking all to surface
clutching the pearl."--Bert Wright, The Sunday Times Ireland
"As McCarthy answered Faulkner, Lynch offers the most convincing
answer to McCarthy that we've seen yet in literature. Lynch
sacrifices none of the rigor and menace while summoning an
emotional power that leaves one stunned at times. Grace is a novel
of surpassing beauty and moral weight, and Lynch is a prodigious
talent, with a sorcerer's command of the language and an
extraordinary artistic integrity. This is a masterwork."--Matthew
Thomas, New York Times-bestselling author of We Are Not
Ourselves
"From the savage scalp-shearing of its start, through pages of
figurative and literal black, to the 'good blue days' of its end,
Grace is a thing of power and of wonder. Paul Lynch writes novels
the way we need them to be written: as if every letter of every
word mattered. This whole book is on fire."
--Laird Hunt, author of Neverhome and The Evening Road
"Grace's journey is thrilling enough but Lynch's poetic and
cinematic prose endows her with a voice that should make her a
classic of Irish literature.... Not just another historical novel,
Grace is one of the most memorable and unique books I've read.--Zoe
Fairtlough, Bookbrowse
"Growing into womanhood as a wanderer, Grace rises above cruel
circumstances to control her own destiny in remarkably surprising
directions, casting new light on this grim and pivotal era in Irish
history."--Margaret Flanagan, Booklist
"If you took the most overwhelming and distilled moments of a
life-those instants when even a small brush of the wind over a
stream seems to speak to the whole problem of living-and scattered
them along an Irish riverside during that country's great famine,
you might arrive at Grace. This is a major work of lasting,
powerful feelings that might find a place amidst your memories of
Light in August and Huckleberry Finn."
--Will Chancellor, author of A Brave Man Seven Storeys Tall
"In 19th-century Ireland, with the Great Famine looming, a young
girl named Grace embarks on a journey and comes of age across a
landscape rife with suffering and flashes of beauty."--Caroline
Rogers, Southern Living
"It's not just style that makes this an unforgettable book. Its
heroine, 14-year-old Grace, may not have much to say for herself,
but her younger brother, Colly, is a gleefully riddling, smutty
delight. Separated by a tragedy soon after they are expelled from
home to fend for themselves, Colly's irresistible voice continues
to ring in Grace's ears.What ensues is full of incident and
grotesques, fizzing with adventure, a counter to the enervating
effects of their starvation. But gradually it becomes a darker book
as hunger eats away at humanity - and the darker it gets, the more
[Lynch's] unerring gifts are confirmed."--Stephanie Cross, The
Daily Mail UK
"Lynch's wonderful third novel follows a teenage girl through
impoverished Ireland at the height of the Great Famine.... Lynch's
powerful, inventive language intensifies the poignancy of the woe
that characterizes this world of have-nothings struggling to
survive."
--Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
"Readers who enjoy a challenge and a smattering of Gaelic will be
enthralled...bleak and unsparing yet often mesmerizing."--Christine
Perkins, LibraryJournal
"Rich prose, dense with meaning...a profound and unusual
coming-of-age story."--The Sunday Times UK
"Sheer transfixing energy.... There is a strong smack of McCarthy
in Grace's tale of a perilous but cathartic road trip through a
desolate world.... Lynch is frighteningly skilled, searing images
into the mind and forcing you to press carefully through sentences
as if they are strips of long grass.... The connection to the land
is unmistakable even if this an ultra-gothic vision of
Ireland."--Hilary A. White, Irish Independent
"The power of Paul Lynch's imagination is truly startling; his
ability to inhabit and deeply understand the moments, both slight
and shattering, of a life and of an era translates into an instinct
not just for story, but for the most hidden, most forceful currents
of language and what they can do."
--Belinda McKeon, author of Tender
"The prose flows like good Irish whiskey and compels readers to
keep drinking in Lynch's words; sometimes so poetic they read like
a James Joyce novel."--Kathe Robin, RT Book Review
"When you finish, you feel like saying 'wow.' Under your breath
perhaps, but do not be hard on yourself if you shout it out,
because this is a work of staggering beauty and deep insight....
Sentence after sentence pulls you up in your tracks and has you
rereading."--Frank O'Shea, Sydney Morning Herald
Lynch never shies away from the subject matter...but he entwines it
all with prose that sways from brutally realistic scenes into the
fullness of the landscape and back again in just a few words...In
Lynch's deft hands I found myself enthralled as Grace cuts herself
a path through a forbidding world."--Johanna Zwirner, The Paris
Review
PRAISE FOR GRACE
"Grace is a story of ghosts but it isn't a ghost story. Grace is a
story of the Great Famine, but it's not narrowly political. Grace
is a tale of misery, but it's not a misery memoir. Lynch is a
sure-footed tightrope walker....his lush, poetic prose deliberately
and painfully acts as a foil to the reality of the
famine."--Katherine Grant, The New York Times Book Review
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