The extraordinary story of one long summer in the life of an 18-year-old boy caught up in the chaos and conflict of Ireland in the 1980s.
Siobhan Dowd lived in Oxford with her husband, Geoff, before
tragically dying from cancer in August 2007, aged 47. She was both
an extraordinary writer and an extraordinary person.
Siobhan's first novel, A Swift Pure Cry, won the Branford Boase
Award and the Eilis Dillon Award and was shortlisted for the
Carnegie Medal and Booktrust Teenage Prize.
Her second novel, The London Eye Mystery, won the 2007 NASEN & TES
Special Educational Needs Children's Book Award. In March 2008, the
book was shortlisted for the prestigious Children's Books Ireland
Bisto Awards.
Siobhan's third novel, Bog Child, was the first book to be
posthumously awarded the Carnegie Medal in 2008.
The award-winning novel A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness was based
on an idea of Siobhan's. Her novella, The Ransom of Dond, was
published in 2013, illustrated throughout by Pam Smy.
As a writer, Dowd appears to be incapable of a jarring phrase or a
lazy metaphor. Her sentences sing, each note resonates with an
urgent humanity of the sort that cannot be faked
*Guardian*
The work of an outstanding writer
*The Sunday Times*
A captivating first love affair, a hilarious red herring and
profound truths about politics and family add up to a novel set to
win awards in the coming year
*Observer*
An unflinchingly honest and brave novel
*Irish Independent*
Only two months in, and I may have already found my favourite book
of the year. Siobhan Dowd's Bog Child is an astonishing read and
the kind of book that holds you in a trance
*The Bookseller*
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