Author:Donal Ryan
From the twice Man Booker longlisted author of From a Low and Quiet Sea
'Poetic, powerful and heart-rending' THE TIMES
'An exquisite account of womanhood, friendship, prejudice and tradition that is both intimate in scale and awesome in achievement' IRISH INDEPENDENT
Melody Shee is alone and in trouble. Her husband doesn't take her news too well. She can't tell her father yet because he's a good man and this could break him. She's trying to stay in the moment, but the future is looming - larger by the day - while the past won't let her go. What she did to Breedie Flynn all those years ago still haunts her.
It's a good thing that she meets Mary Crothery when she does. Mary is a young Traveller woman, and she knows more about Melody than she lets on. She might just save Melody's life.
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'A joy to read, for all that it breaks your heart'INDEPENDENT
'One of the finest writers working in Ireland today ... worthy of Greek Drama'GUARDIAN
'A stunning piece of work, utterly truthful and emotionally powerful'JOSEPH O'CONNOR
'Work of genius ... I was entranced by it. Buckled by it' SEBASTIAN BARRY
Poetic, powerful and heart-rending
—— The TimesA joy to read, for all that it breaks your heart
—— IndependentOne of the finest writers working in Ireland today ... worthy of Greek drama
—— GuardianAn exquisite account of womanhood, friendship, prejudice and tradition that is both intimate in scale and awesome in achievement
—— Irish IndependentWork of genius ... I was entranced by it. Buckled by it.
—— Sebastian BarryA stunning piece of work, utterly truthful and emotionally powerful
—— Joseph O’ConnorSo beautifully written and so full of compassion and humanity that I wanted to set fire to my laptop and never write again.
—— Liz Nugent , Irish Independent Books of the YearDonal Ryan's new book is an enthrallingly impassioned and compassionate read, ferocious but humane. All We Shall Know acknowledges the acts of vicious self-destruction the human heart is capable of, but does not accept the irreparability of such acts. To his raw, wounded and grieving characters Donal Ryan says: If you are still breathing, you can be redeemed.
—— Colin BarrettI read it with enormous pleasure. He is a remarkably imaginative and beautiful user of the language. This book is very moving and true. I love the truth in his work.
—— Jennifer JohnstonAll We Shall Know is really very good. All that we've come to expect from Donal: great humanity and an uncanny sense of place but this time – and at last! – we have a man writing from a woman's point of view in a totally convincing and non-patronising way.
—— Christine Dwyer HickeyDazzling
—— Mariella Frostrup , Open Book, BBC Radio 4My book of the year . . . a remarkable piece of literature. . . . Gets under the skin and into the brain of the reader. It's so absorbing . . . a beauty.
—— Ryan Tubridy , RTE Radio 1Donal Ryan's finest and surest novel yet is a touching, unsentimental tale. . . . Ryan's empathy for his women adds depth, power and humanity to a layered story of love, betrayal and redemption.
—— RTE GuideAll We Shall Know is a new and ambitious departure . . . exerts a powerful grip. . . . the novel, written at white heat in sentences that sometimes flow for a full paragraph, reads compulsively and is delivered with an impressively disciplined power. Ryan’s rise to prominence may have been meteoric and his output dizzyingly prolific, but he is a writer who is very far from being a flash in the pan.
—— Roy Foster , The Irish TImesRyan is alert to the sharp, hurtful qualities of language. . . . His ear for dialogue is superb. . . . An awesome creation, [Melody] is at times heroically unlikeable.
—— Peter Brown , Times Literary SupplementA consummate artist . . . The denouement offers a satisfying element of redemption . . . a great writer whose steady maturation proceeds apace.
—— The Sunday TimesRaw, radiant prose . . . [a] wonderful novel.
—— Sunday Express[A] gem of a novel. With a sure sense of place, and a convincing portrayal of life lived at the edgy margins, it vividly plots the landscape of the heart en route to a gripping and ultimately redemptive finale.
—— Daily MailRaw and redemptive.
—— Sunday Business PostGripping and beautiful.
—— Image magazineRyan's third novel is an elegant, unflinching, entirely brilliant look at the waywardness of desire. . . . searing honesty that is raw but utterly riveting.
—— Psychologies magazineA powerful story that will pull you into a whirlwind of emotion and pain, but also the faintest glimmer of hope.
—— Irish Country magazineShines through its female characters.
—— Irish TatlerA stunning story that deserves great success.
—— Good HousekeepingAll We Shall Know blew me away, left me blubbering on my commute and wide awake at 2 a.m. . . . He excels at first-person narrative, and it's this that makes All We Shall Know unforgettable.
—— Stylist magazineAn intense, dramatic story . . . rather touching.
—— Mail on SundayHis best yet . . . I kept re-reading paragraphs and whole pages to savour Ryan's remarkable prose. The book imbues profanity with poetry, and the characters, for all their flaws, are beautifully and sympathetically drawn.
—— Hot PressUnflinching.
—— Radio TimesA wonderful novel.
—— S MagazineIn a word, this book is stunning.
—— The BooksellerMcEwan muses on love, empathy and the morality and ethics of artificial intelligence… very good.
—— Richard Dismore , Daily Mirror, *Book of the Month*An important literary contribution to the AI debate, one of the great questions of our time.
—— Country and TownhousePrecisely rendered and well observed… [McEwan] neatly delineates humanity’s remorseless self-demotion from the centre of the universe to flotsam.
—— Lionel Shriver , Standpoint[An] undeniably another excellent novel from McEwan, who demonstrates that he can conjure up challenging characters, witty dialogue and moral ambiguity when dealing with sex robots just as brilliantly as he does on literary turf.
—— Hilary Lamb , Institution of Engineering and TechnologyDexterous, utterly gripping and intensely thought-provoking.
—— attitude, *Book of the Month*Deeply unnerving… What starts out as a darkly funny ménage à trois becomes an unsettling examination of the human condition. Bold, clever.
—— Laura Powell , Sunday TelegraphThe latest novel from my favourite author tackles the subjects of artificial intelligence and what it is to be human. He does this in a surprising, original way, and Adam, the strong, seductive “robot”, is a character that will haunt me for a long time.
—— Victoria Hislop , The Week[This] new, gripping, beautifully written and constructed, disturbing, and provocative novel…is a thrilling read… the chilling conclusions that hyper-rationalism can come to are brilliantly described.
—— Roger Jones , BJGPMcEwan maintains his status as a master of fiction.
—— Maria Crawford , Financial Times, *Summer Reads of 2019*A new collection of stories that explores the complex - and often darkly funny - connections between gender, sex, and power across genres.
—— The Week, *Summer reads of 2019*Ian McEwan’s sublimely playful new novel transports you back to the Eighties but with some major changes, including eerily life-like robots… Dark and slyly funny, it’ll also give your brain a workout.
—— Neil Armstrong and Hephizbah Anderson , Mail on Sunday, *Summer Reads of 2019*