The Home Scar is Kathleen MacMahon's fourth novel. Her debut, This is How it Ends, spent five weeks at the top of the Irish bestseller chart, and was a Richard and Judy Book Club choice. It was followed by The Long, Hot Summer, also an Irish bestseller, and Nothing But Blue Sky, longlisted for the 2021 Women's Prize for Fiction. Kathleen is a former broadcast journalist. She lives in Dublin with her family.
A powerful story about legacy and loss and the possibility of
reconciliation
*Irish Times*
Her beautifully simple style belies psychological complexity . . .
and her tone is wryly accepting
*Big Issue*
Quiet and bleakly beautiful . . . like the siblings and Ireland, it
will leave a permanent mark on those who venture into its
depths
*Buzz*
Picks at the wounds only a mother can inflict . . . ambitious . . .
intricate
*Sunday Independent*
An exceptional novel about a brother and sister returning to the
west of Ireland and to a summer of their past.
*Sunday Independent*
MacMahon writes with such beautiful simplicity, conjuring real and
complex people straight off the page . . . subtle and authentic
*Claire Fuller*
Thoughtful, understated . . . it has a quiet power
*Irish Independent*
Wonderful
*RTÉ*
A gorgeous story of sibling love. It reads like a psychological
adventure story into memory
*Louise Nealon*
A spell-binding story of inherited grief and the unbreakable bond
between siblings as they unpick memories of their shared past . . .
[MacMahon's] characters feel authentic and relatable for all their
flaws
*Aingeala Flannery*
Such a treat . . . another stunner from Kathleen MacMahon
*Henrietta McKervey*
With her usual effortless writing style and ability to make
characters pop off the page, [The Home Scar] is a moving read
*Woman's Way*
An intriguing, meticulous and generation-spanning story of love,
loss and healing
*Ed O'Loughlin*
Kathleen MacMahon's subject is memory itself: how we remember - and
the impact upon our future lives when our memories deceive us.
Compassionate and poignant, The Home Scar is a work of considerable
moral power
*Neil Hegarty*
A very grown-up novel about life and love, of course, and above
all, the repercussions of a disrupted childhood . . . a real tour
de force
*Christine Dwyer Hickey*
The Home Scar once again displays Kathleen MacMahon's gimlet-eyed
understanding of grown-up frailty
*Hilary Fannin*
A delight - I loved every word of it
*Catherine Dunne*
An understated, powerful read.
*Irish Examiner*
[MacMahon's] exploration of connection, to each other and the ones
we've lost, is . . . sensitively done and wrapped in the rich
storytelling that has made her a notable name in Irish
literature
*RTÉ Guide*
A love story to the west of Ireland as much as it is a family
mystery, this beautifully written novel will entrance anyone who
has memories of childhood holidays spent in the area.
*Sunday Independent*
MacMahon's fourth novel ... is another eloquently written and
elegantly shaped novel that lays bare those scars that many of us
carry and cover.
*RTÉ Guide*
An exceptional novel by one of Ireland's foremost literary talents.
A book not to be missed
*Anne Griffin*
One of Ireland's finest twenty-first century writers
*Margaret Madden*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |