The Boy from the Sea

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Compulsive reading' Louise Kennedy, author of Trespasses In 1973 a baby is found on the beach of a close-knit town on Ireland’s west coast. The baby fascinates the community and the boy he grows to be will fascinate them too – no one can quite get to the bottom of Brendan Bonnar. That's the name given to the baby by Ambrose, the fisherman who adopts him. Ambrose is a man of great bulk and great heart, and he brings Brendan into his home. It’s a decision born of love, but one that will fracture his family and force this man – emotionally illiterate, more comfortable at sea than on land – to try to understand himself and those he loves. \n\nTold in the communal voice of a small fishing town, The Boy From the Sea is a story of a family and a community, bookended by the arrival and departure of this mesmerizing boy. Over the years it charts the rises and falls in the Bonnars’ and the town’s fortunes, as the global economy and the EU fisheries flex their muscles. The world is turning, and this corner of Donegal is shifting begrudgingly along with it. Outrageously funny and incredibly moving, The Boy from the Sea is for fans of Olive Kitteridge and the writing of Claire Keegan and Jon McGregor.

Garrett Carr teaches Creative Writing at the Seamus Heaney Centre, Queen?s University Belfast, and has published three YA novels with Simon & Schuster. The Rule of the Land: Walking Ireland's Border was published by Faber in 2017 and was a BBC Radio 4 Book of the Week. Garrett is a frequent contributor to The Guardian and The Irish Times. The Boy from the Sea is his debut novel for adults.

Garrett Carr

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