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A gripping novel that mirrors the disintegration of our times - as the Mail on Sunday says 'An armchair time bomb'.
Brian Moore was born in Belfast. He emigrated to Canada in 1948 and then moved to California. He twice won the Canadian Governor General's Award for Fiction and has been given a special award from the United States Institute of Arts and Letters. He won the Author's Club First Novel Award for The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for The Great Victorian Collection. The Doctor's Wife, The Colour of Blood - winner of the Sunday Express 1988 Book of the Year - and Lies of Silence were all shortlisted for the Booker Prize. Five of his novels have been made into films - The Luck of Ginger Coffey, Catholics, The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne, Cold Heaven and Black Robe. Brian Moore died in 1999.
An armchair time bomb
*Mail on Sunday*
This is a novel to mirror the disintegration of our times, the
unstated irony of which is that a politics so provincial can breed
a writer and an art so universal
*Observer*
A gripping read which you will find impossible to put down
*Literary Review*
Very much the thinking person's thriller - utterly tense and
riveting, but also posing an acute moral dilemma for an ordinary
person caught up in the troubled politics of Northern Ireland
*Daily Express*
It insists on being read at a sitting, for it is imperative to know
what happens next
*Financial Times*
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