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Fallen
Fallen
Jan 12, 2026 3:12 AM

Author:Lia Mills

Fallen

Fallen by Lia Mills - a remarkable love story amidst the ruins of the First World War and the Easter Rising

SELECTED AS THE 2016 'ONE CITY ONE BOOK' TITLE FOR BOTH DUBLIN AND BELFAST

Spring, 1915. Katie Crilly gets the news she dreaded: her beloved twin brother, Liam, has been killed on the Western Front.

A year later, when her home city of Dublin is suddenly engulfed by the violence of the Easter Rising, Katie finds herself torn by conflicting emotions and loyalties. Taking refuge in the home of a friend, she meets Hubie Wilson, a friend of Liam's from the Front. There unfolds a remarkable encounter between two young people, both wounded and both trying to imagine a new life.

'Lia Mills writes superbly about the human heart. This is an historical story with an urgency that is completely modern: Fallen is shot through with the pleasure and the difficulty of being alive' Anne Enright

'A hugely evocative and skilful novel' Kevin Barry

'Tremendously passionate, vivid and humane ... Mills has an exquisite eye for the telling image' Irish Independent

'Absorbing ... Mills is a fine storyteller' Sunday Times

'Vivid ... a careful study of how grief, oppression, violence and, above all, the imperative to follow orders can blight people's lives' Irish Mail on Sunday

'Powerful ... Katie is a brilliantly realised heroine ... humane and compelling' Sunday Business Post

'[An] intelligent, beautifully written tale of ordinary people in troubled times' Sunday Independent

Reviews

Tremendously passionate, vivid and humane ... Mills has an exquisite eye for the telling image

—— Irish Independent

Absorbing ... Mills is a fine storyteller

—— Sunday Times

Vivid ... a careful study of how grief, oppression, violence and, above all, the imperative to follow orders can blight people's lives

—— Irish Mail on Sunday

Powerful ... Katie is a brilliantly realised heroine ... humane and compelling

—— Sunday Business Post

[An] intelligent, beautifully written tale of ordinary people in troubled times

—— Sunday Independent

Making Nice is a confident debut with a strong and youthful voice that refuses to accept life’s injustices

—— Sarah Gilmartin , Irish Times

Violent, comic, and genuine, this book mixes truly relatable experience with the outlandish imaginings of a volatile character at odds with the rest of the world, and will make you cringe, hold your breath, and laugh. Put simply, Making Nice is a lovely book. You should read it

—— We Love This Book

One of the funniest (and best) books of the year

—— Publishers Weekly

Sumell’s shrapnel-sharp sense of humor is never more than a sentence away. By the time you’re finished, you’ll want more of Alby, which is good, because his creator’s just getting started

—— GQ

To say that Matt Sumell is an original voice is an immense understatement. Making Nice is ferocious and merciful, comic and heartbreaking. It will turn you inside out

—— Ramona Ausubel

Sumell nails something about his generation which is feat enough, but beneath the funniness and swagger and freshness and raw energy is a sincerity that is rare and true

—— Aimee Bender

Matt Sumell injects plenty of black humour, making for a bleakly enjoyable read

—— Shortlist

For fans of BJ Novak or Sam Lipsyte, Sumell’s self-destructive novel will appeal

—— Sara Keating , Sunday Business Post

Sumell manages to achieve a wondrous balance: pathos, humor, and serious angst rolled up in narration by a delightfully self-deprecating underdog... assured, inventive, and raucous storytelling

—— The Rumpus

Indelible writing... Meet Alby, an Everybro for the millennial set

—— Entertainment Weekly

From the first page, Sumell’s exceptional novel in stories unleashes one of the most comically arresting voices this side of Sam Lipsyte’s Homeland... Sumell’s debut demonstrates an almost painful compassion for the sinner in most of us, making Making Nice even more fun than eavesdropping in a confession booth

—— Publishers Weekly

Sumell’s compulsively readable novel in stories introduces a restless underachiever as irresistible as he is detestable, surely one of the most morally, violently, socially complex personalities in recent literature…. Sumell’s debut is humbly macho, provoking outrage, pity, and finally tenderness. Perhaps this is a book readers will hate to love, but only because it feels, like Alby, all too real

—— Booklist

There's a special alchemy here that you are going to want to witness...offhand and funny, and then the tender heart emerges from the shadows, so tender, and comes at us with a knife. Every story here is two: one the fun, the other the blade

—— Ron Carlson

Focusing on the single reality that human beings die, Sumell wakes up, and boy oh boy is he ever pissed off... Sumell, on Alby's behalf, fights back, and he fights dirty. Using cunning, reckless rage, and bravura comic timing, he kicks death's ass... Bystanders get hurt, the reader got hurt, but at least I was reminded that I was part of this whole shitty deal. You'd like to believe that there are consolations, and there are. Being sentient, for example. Being able to read, for instance. Having read Making Nice

—— Geoffrey Wolff

The self-destructive narrator lashes out with reckless intimacy, random violence, and an often hilarious misplaced rage that shoots to wound rather than kill. What saves its victims and the reader is a naked rendering of a heart sorting through its broken pieces to survive. The result is an eloquent empathy, an uplift of hope-filled grace

—— Mark Richard

Making Nice will grab you by the throat, raise your blood pressure, and cause you to chortle in a crowd. It will also break your heart. When they're writing the history of the best characters of our time, Alby will be there, telling the others to get in line

—— Matthew Thomas , author of We Are Not Ourselves

Making Nice is a little bit special. A truly original portrayal of grief

—— Benjamin Judge , Book Munch

Making Nice has an anarchic humour and a goofy, ingenuous humanity that makes every page feel new… Some jokes…aren’t just funny, they are insightful, unexpected and hilarious. In its rampage to nowhere, Making Nice achieves the remarkable feat of making it feel better to travel hopelessly than to arrive.

—— Sandra Newman , Guardian
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