Author:Paolo Sorrentino,Howard Curtis

‘I’m going back to what I was twenty years ago. I’m riding across a terrain of buried curiosity, the adrenaline is starting to flow again, and the old obsessions are coming back: I want to start doing cocaine every day, I want to run after every female who passes, I want to smell the smells of Italy again, I want my old life back. It’s a bit late for all that, I know, but who gives a fuck? I want to die stark naked, drowned in a well of Ballantine’s, surrounded by whores. All this I want, suddenly, I want it very much indeed. But I hide it well.’
This is the story of Tony Pagoda, a hero of our time, a man of incredible energies and appetites with a dark secret in his past and a unique perspective on the world.
1980s Italy is Tony’s oyster. A charismatic singer, he is talented and successful, up to his neck in money, drugs and women, enjoying an extravagant lifestyle in Naples and Capri. But when life gets complicated, Tony decides it’s time for a change. While on tour, he disappears to Brazil and an existence free from excess, where all he has to worry about are the herculean cockroaches. But after eighteen years of humid Amazonian exile, somebody is willing to sign a giant cheque to bring Tony back to Italy. How will he face the temptations of his old habits and the new century?
A huge bestseller in Italy, Everybody's Right is an extraordinary debut novel from the award-winning film director Paolo Sorrentino. It is a book about Italy and a book about the modern world; a book about Tony and a book about all of us. Through Tony’s irresistible voice Sorrentino illustrates his imaginative power and his incredible gifts for drama and satire.
Frequently funny writing... The story speeds along with a fast-moving, Raymond Chandler type plot, although it finishes with a shocking tenderness
—— Daily Mail[A] visceral first-person account and fantastically unreliable narration brilliantly capturing the brand of modern-day Italy that Berlusconi exported… A novel of bleak gallows humour
—— GQFlooded with neat aphorisms and winning vignettes…it works as a cock-eyed state-of-the-nation address after the years of Berlusconification… A blackly comic birl through a life of excess, regret and reflection
—— Glasgow Sunday HeraldA furious, ironic, idiosyncratic, unexpurgated torrent, capturing Italian modernity
—— KirkusSorrentino uses this novel to deal with Italy's unstoppable descent into today's dazed, corrupted and tragically foolish reality...[in] exceptionally adventurous language
—— La RepubblicaRemarkable... It's hard to forget Tony...his image sticks in the reader's mind...he is a true hero of our times
—— L'EspressoMake sure this novel is in your beach bag this summer
—— MonocleOne thinks of...The Tin Drum... A bracing alternative to the staleness of formula, whether on a downscale Italian tour, wandering a Brazilian shantytown, or sinking into a Manhattan mashup of showbiz and sleaze
—— BookForumThe book has stayed with me
—— Jonathan Franzen , Guardian, Best Books of 2018It’s a beautiful, luminous kind of piece - full of mystery, compassion, woven with such skill; heartbreaking and restorative. I will carry these splintered men around with me for a long time, along with the women who have loved them.
—— RACHEL JOYCEFrom a Low and Quiet Sea is beautifully written, compassionate and almost unbearably moving. I loved it. I would struggle to think of any other Irish author working today who writes with as much compassion as Donal Ryan.
—— LOUISE O'NEILLDonal Ryan writes with such sharp observation and humanity, that he makes us sit up and wonder at the tiny quiet internal lives of strangers. His writing is a wonderful gift to all of us. From a Low and Quiet Sea is another short and perfect novel to be inhaled in one heart-lurching gulp.
—— LIZ NUGENTRyan is not the first Irish writer indebted to Joyce, but his work reminds me of something Sylvia Beach said about Joyce: “He told me that he had never met a bore.”…Wonderful
—— Irish TimesDeft and devastating…this book is both hard-hitting and uplifting: it serves as an indictment of the care industry, but also as a tribute to the way that humans care for one another.
—— The ObserverThe denouement, which comes in breathless bursts, is devastating. From a Low and Quiet Sea leaves you with that sense of discombobulating enlightenment that so often characterises the quiet epiphanies of great short stories.
—— Sunday TimesA masterly portrait . . . the confidence with which Ryan dons the clothing of another culture marks a departure for his writing . . . a successor to John McGahern . . . It is exciting to see his subject matter move beyond his country’s borders, with the prospect of more of this to come.’
—— The SpectatorHaunting ... utterly persuasive
—— Joseph O'Connor , Irish Times, Books of the YearThe lives and stories, loves and tragedies, animating From a Low and Quiet Sea are wonderfully individual and finely alive. This is a brief book: yet one that lingers long in the reader’s mind.
—— New StatesmanAs moving as anything written about Syria
—— Mail on SundayIt is vomit-inducing, it’s so good.
—— Kit de Waal, ObserverBewitching…unforgettable...It takes a good writer to frame right and wrong within a coherent narrative and make it not feel like a finger-wagging sermon. It takes a great one, however, to make the contents heave and sigh before your eyes.’
—— Irish IndependentEmpathy shines through the work
—— Sunday IndependentRyan has the ability to shatter your heart into a million pieces with every book he writes - and even have you welcome the pain.
—— StylistAn example of masterful storytelling
—— RTE CultureWith each novel Ryan gets better, and this moving and quietly insistent work is his best yet.
—— RTE GuideYou can sense his compassion in the bones of his work
—— Sunday Business PostDevastating and masterful
—— Irish Country MagazineA hugely affecting, moving read. I was heartbroken by the end, but adored every chapter
—— Image MagazineBeautiful
—— Woman’s WayEach section displays Ryan’s range as a writer... [he] writes with brilliant empathy.
—— Boston GlobeExquisitely rendered, with raw anguish sublimated into lyrical prose.
—— Washington PostHeartbreaking … Arguably the best of the new wave of Irish writers to have emerged over the last decade
—— Irish Mail on the Sunday, Books of the YearRyan has the gift of ventriloquism - he inhabits his fictional creations thoroughly, enveloping you in their worlds
—— Sunday Business Post, Books of the YearSublime
—— Irish Independent, Books of the YearFrom a Low and Quiet Sea by Donal Ryan made me laugh and cry and forced me to look strangers in the eye
—— Liz Nugent , Irish Times, Books of the YearBeautifully bleak and characterised by his remarkable ability to write about grief and common humanities.
—— Diarmaid Ferriter , Irish Times, Books of the YearBeautiful, compassionate
—— Sinéad Crowley , RTÉ Culture, Best Books of 2018Superlatives wouldn’t do for describing From a Low and Quiet Sea … understated, and gloriously heart rendering
—— Hot Press, Books of the Year






