Author:Bernard MacLaverty
Returning to Belfast after a long absense, to attend her father`s funeral. Catherine McKenna-a young composer-remembers exactly why she left: the claustrophobic intimacies of the Catholic enclave, her fastidious, nagging mother, and the pervading tensions of a city at war with itself. She remembers a more innocent time, when the Loyalists Lambeg drums sounded mysterious and exciting; she remembers her shattered relationship with the drunken, violent Dave, she remembers the child she had with him, waiting back in Glasgow. This is a novel, about coming to terms with the past and the healing power of music, GRACE NOTES is a master story-teller`s triumphant return to the long form: a powerful lyrical novel of great distinction.
A masterpiece
—— Sunday TelegraphAs rich and exciting as Umberto Eco's The Name of the Rose, but deeper and more disturbing... It begins as a murder mystery but ends in a revelation of deeper mysteries of death and rebirth
—— New York TimesHighly imaginative
—— GuardianA short, charged and imaginative fable-cum-murder-mystery which uses [Fuller's] gift for narrative and for elaborate metaphor to great effect
—— Sunday Times'Absolutely outrageous - a dazzling writer'
—— Jilly Cooper , The Sunday Times'This is a dirty book'
—— The Times Literary Supplement'Fine comic scenes...readers will have trouble putting Sap Rising down, even if their gorge rises'
—— Daily Express'Imagine Barbara Pym writing for Penthouse'
—— Literary Review'He writes so brilliantly'
—— Daniel Farson , Evening Standard'Extremely funny'
—— Time Out'Do not buy this book'
—— Guardian'Frightful pile of garbage'
—— New Statesman