Monaghan

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A01=Timothy O'Grady
art and politics
Author_Timothy O'Grady
Category=FBA
Category=FJM
Category=FV
coming of age in Ireland
contemporary Irish literature
County Monaghan
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_historical-fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_new_release
eq_nobargain
family secrets
generational trauma
introspective literary fiction
Ireland and diaspora
Irish borderlands
Irish history fiction
Irish identity
Irish literary fiction
landscape and memory
legacy of conflict
literary novels set in Ireland
masculinity and violence
memory and inheritance
political violence and its aftermath
rural Ireland
Troubles era Ireland

Product details

  • ISBN 9781806770090
  • Weight: 250g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: Wilton Square Books
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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'Beautiful and complex' — Annie Proulx
'A writer of exceptional gifts' — Louise Kennedy
'O'Grady strikes a beautiful note' — Kevin Barry

Moving from West Belfast and County Monaghan to the streets of San Francisco, Timothy O’Grady’s exhilarating new novel is an epic portrait of art and war, authenticity and selling out, told through the fates of three men.

Ronan Treanor, Monaghan native and teller of this tale, is a celebrated theorist of postmodern architecture in New York. Paul Crane, single son of a hotel maid in Indiana, turns his mathematical gift into a multimillion-dollar career as an investment banker. And the mysterious Ryan, who drew as a boy in besieged West Belfast, but was swept up in the war against the British and lived a decade of extreme and escalating violence as a sniper. Through him, the war in Ireland and its psychic legacy are brought into close focus in a way rarely seen in contemporary fiction.

Their lives merge and conflict, rise and fall, as one man becomes the undoing of the next. Hauntingly beautiful, lyrical and profound, this is a novel about what happens when you cannot escape your past, featuring drawings and paintings by Anthony Lott.

'O’Grady evokes place, the latent violence of Ireland in the 1980s and its psychic displacements. The prose is mesmerising' — Una Mannion, author of Tell Me What I Am

'Monaghan reveals the legacy of violence and political division in a gripping narrative and a precise and original voice' — Erica Wagner, literary critic

'Monaghan is written with an intensity that is remarkable in contemporary fiction . . . Timothy O’Grady is a major writer of our time' — Patrick Joyce, author of Going to My Father’s House

Timothy O’Grady was born in Chicago and has lived in Ireland, London, Spain and Poland. He is the author of four works of non-fiction and four novels. His novel Motherland won the David Higham Prize for the best first novel in 1989. His novel I Could Read the Sky, a collaboration with photographer Steve Pyke, won the Encore Award for best second novel of 1997. It was filmed and also travelled as a stage show. 

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