Author:Bernard MacLaverty,Conor Mullen

On a promontory jutting out into the Atlantic wind stands the Home run by Brother Benedict, where boys are taught a little of God and a lot of fear. To Michael Lamb, one of the youngest brothers, the regime is without hope, and when he inherits a small legacy he defies his elders and runs away, taking with him a twelve-year-old boy, Owen Kane. Radio Eireann call it a kidnapping. For Michael the act is the beginning of Owen's salvation. Posing as father and son, they concentrate on discovering the happiness that is so unfamiliar to them both. But as the outside world closes in around them - as time, money and opportunity run out - Michael finds himself moving towards a solution that is as uncompromising as it is inspired by love.
A subtle, inventive and moving meditation on the nature of story and what Louis MacNeice calls 'the drunkenness of things being various'
—— John BanvilleDazzling...an ingeniously Borgesian novel that's witty, playful, moving and tirelessly inventive. Mr. Mason has found a supple, lyrical voice in these pages that captures the spirit of the original Odyssey and at the same time feels freshly contemporary...a stunning and hypnotic novel
—— New York TimesSpellbinding. In his versions of these ancient myths Mason twists and jinks, renegotiating the journey to Ithaca with all the guile and trickery of Odysseus himself
—— Simon ArmitageA small triumph...the invention on display is beguiling...He offers the reader a book of intellectual fireworks that also manages to be wonderfully entertaining
—— Sunday TimesImpressive
—— GuardianMason allows this grand myth of homecoming no beginning or end, just banks of fog, endless mirrors, Borgesian labyrinths...Mason delights in doubles, spirals, conceptual mazes and Moebius strips...he is a wondrous pleasure to read
—— Los Angeles TimesDazzling fiction... Following in the tradition of Borges, Mason brilliantly reveals a hero even more ambiguous than in Homer's original and an ancient world beset by 21st century uncertainty
—— Financial TimesDazzlingly imaginative modern take on the oldest of fairy tales...always the alternate universe is created with amazing invention, a poet's gift for a resonant image
—— WordWhat cannot be stressed enough is the simplicity and control of the verbal texture of the book
—— Simon Goldhill , Times Literary SupplementPlayful, gripping and teasingly philosophical without ever being overwhelming, the book reimagines in plain yet often poetic prose many of the Odyssey's key stories, tantalising the reader with alternative outcomes, unexpected twists and haunting interludes
—— Sunday TimesTaylor wears his research lightly but there is no doubt how much effort he has expended... The whole is an engaging drama - escapism of the highest standard
—— Independent on SundayTaylor manages to successfully pastiche a 19th-century mystery novel with this fast paced, enjoyable read
—— The TimesThis is a book to read by the fireside, to be swept along in, to realise - with a start - that hours have gone by...In other words, to rediscover the lost-in-another-world joy of reading. And this book really IS a joy...my favourite book of the year so far
—— Eastern Daily PressA delicious, highly intelligent page-turner... With clever, confident plotting and meticulous period details, this is an engrossing and deeply satisfying read
—— Good book GuideAs you would expect from somebody steeped in Victorian fictional history, Taylor rarely puts a foot wrong...the colourful events which take place on the Downs should delight any racing enthusiast
—— Racing PostTaylor’s love and understanding of Victorian melodrama is put to good use in this tangibly detailed and deliciously written pastiche centred on an Epsom Derby swindle
—— Sunday TelegraphThis is a fictional world in which daughters are ready to bump off their fathers, husbands to exploit their wives, and everyone is happy to chance their assets on the wheel of fortune. It’s a novel that will keep you gripped until the very last furlong
—— Emma Hagestadt , IndependentIt is a detective story as gripping as the Victorian novels that inspired it, and is written with narrative flair and a terrific sense of fun
—— Robert Douglas-Fairhurst , Daily TelegraphDerby Day will be hard to put down... As ever with Taylor, literary complexities lurk under the smooth surface of a stylish page-turner
—— Conde Nast TravellerDe Witt has intelligence, wit and unusual stylistic bravery
—— GuardianAn ambitious, colossal debut novel
—— Publishers WeeklyDeWitt pushes enjoyably but firmly against (and sometimes beyond) the unknown capabilities of the reader
—— Harry Strawson , Times Literary Supplement