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Mount Merrion
Mount Merrion
Jul 7, 2025 11:12 AM

Author:Justin Quinn

Mount Merrion

Justin Quinn's Mount Merrion: a gripping family story spanning half a century, in the mould of Jonathan Franzen and John Lanchester.

Declan and Sinead Boyle are pillars of society - born into prosperous families, educated at Dublin's finest schools, dwellers in a fine house in a leafy suburb. So why are they in so much trouble?

Declan wants to serve his country - but he also wants to serve his own ambition. Sinead wonders if she is allowed, in the Ireland of the sixties and seventies, to have ambitions at all. Their son, Owen, seems intent on squandering the advantages of a prosperous upbringing and an expensive education. Their daughter Issie, gifted and attractive, has all the options in the world - and keeps choosing the wrong one.

Mount Merrion, the dazzling debut novel by Justin Quinn, tells the story of the Boyles from Declan and Sinead's first meeting, in the late fifties, through decades of success, failure and tragedy. Set against the brilliantly realized backdrop of a changing Ireland, it is a page-turning drama, a biting satire and a lovingly detailed portrait of a marriage and a family.

'Imaginative and compassionate ... Mount Merrion is about how a decent man, anxious to play by the rules - even if they're someone else's rules - can make the sort of choices that may end up ruining him' Mail on Sunday (four stars)

'Taking the form of a family saga, [Quinn's] assured debut plays out over half a century - a state-of-the-nation novel as told through the fast-changing fortunes of middle-class married life ... his novel is filled with perfectly judged moments' Independent

'Mesmerising ... The story is a page-turner, and Quinn's prose consistently light and controlled' Irish Independent

'A book that people will find hard to put down ... a gripping story' Sunday Business Post

'A great story ... both beautifully written and a well-paced page-turner' Irish Times

'Justin Quinn's debut novel is poignant - but it is also fiercely and poetically written, a beautifully observed trajectory of the rise and fall of a society and its assumptions, through the medium of a family story ... This is one of the best books of the year' Evening Herald

'Exquisite' Irish Examiner

'Absorbing ... A closely and sympathetically observed portrait of family life and Ireland's changing face, Quinn's wide-ranging tale culminates in a conclusion of considerable pathos' Daily Mail

'An impressively accomplished trip through forty-odd years of Ireland's recent history ... quite brilliant' RTÉ Guide

'A bona fide thumping good read' Image

'An ambitious take on both personal dramas and the altering political landscape of Europe' Sunday Telegraph

'An epic yet intimate account of one family caught in the maelstrom of recent history' Metro Herald

'Accomplished ... as a condition-of-Ireland novel it makes for salutary reading' TLS

'Mount Merrion is epic and intimate, deliciously observed and wholly enjoyable. Justin Quinn is a shining talent.' Claire Kilroy

Reviews

[Quinn's] assured debut plays out over half a century - a state-of-the-nation novel as told through the fast-changing fortunes of middle-class married life ... his novel is filled with perfectly judged moments

—— Independent

Imaginative and compassionate ... Mount Merrion is about how a decent man, anxious to play by the rules - even if they're someone else's rules - can make the sort of choices that may end up ruining him

—— Mail on Sunday

Justin Quinn's debut novel is poignant - but it is also fiercely and poetically written, a beautifully observed trajectory of the rise and fall of a society and its assumptions, through the medium of a family story ... This is one of the best books of the year

—— Evening Herald

Mesmerising ... The story is a page-turner, and Quinn's prose consistently light and controlled

—— Irish Independent

A great story ... both beautifully written and a well-paced page-turner

—— Irish Times

A book that people will find hard to put down ... a gripping story

—— Sunday Business Post

An impressively accomplished trip through forty-odd years of Ireland's recent history ... quite brilliant

—— RTÉ Guide

Exquisite

—— Irish Examiner

An epic yet intimate account of one family caught in the maelstrom of recent history

—— Metro Herald

Accomplished ... as a condition-of-Ireland novel it makes for salutary reading

—— TLS

A bona fide thumping good read

—— Image

An ambitious take on both personal dramas and the altering political landscape of Europe

—— Sunday Telegraph

Stunning. Moving between Wang's many pasts, all of them thrilling, gruesome, and tragic, and Wang's increasingly desperate present, Barker's historical tour de force is simultaneously sweeping and precise. Barker's psychologically nuanced characters and sharp wit turn the bleakness and the gore into something seriously moving. Effortlessly blends the past with the present, dark humour with profound sadness. A deeply human masterpiece.

—— Kirkus

Not since Jung Chang's WILD SWANS has there been such a visceral re-telling of the old days.

—— Open Magazine, India

Barker resembles David Mitchell in the ability to weave together past and present in a convincing, and ultimately intriguing, manner

—— Sydney Morning Herald

China reels with tension

—— LA Review

This is a beautifully structured novel, and the interspersed letters describing previous lives are engrossing and sharp. These past lives are too real to feel like mere metaphor. Cruelty, betrayal and slavery reoccur over the centuries, and are echoed in Wang’s modern life.

The prose is light and often witty, and the characterization is one of the book’s most impressive aspects… This is an extremely satisfying and intelligent book

—— That’s Shanghai

A wonderful piece of historical/fantasy/suspense fiction unlike anything else I've read... Constantly unpredictable and surprising

—— Goodreads

Barker is a phenomenal storyteller. She time-travels seamlessly from the Tang Dynasty in AD 632 to contemporary Beijing and each snippet of each incarnation, rich in convincing detail, is utterly mesmerising

—— Goodreads

Barker has created a set of characters who jump off the page and Wang's heartrending story is sensitively told

—— madabouthebooks.co.uk

Seamlessly weaving Chinese folklore, history, and literary classics, The Incarnations is a taut and gripping novel that sheds light on the cyclical nature of history and it hints that the past is never truly settled.

—— Fantastic Fiction

Remarkable... a time-bending fantasy with an unknown (and possibly unreliable) narrator sweeping us down the rabbit hole of history

—— http://granitestudio.org/

Vivid and engaging

—— Asia Review of Books

The Incarnations is so many stories wrapped into one astounding tale, and the end result is nothing short of a masterpiece. Susan Barker takes us on a breathtaking tour of China's chequered history, and her literary prowess is a thing of beauty.

—— aworldchild.co.uk

The best English-language novel about China I have ever read.

—— Shenzhen Stuff

Engaging, poetic and lyrical... Individually, the historical chapters are compelling, interesting short stories; together you have a novel I want to read with a book club and discuss, discuss, discuss

—— The Star Online

Balances past and present, the grand sweep of history and the intensely personal, all wrapped up in brisk and densely evocative prose. You can never quite be sure where Wang's story is going to turn next - not even after a thousand years.

—— welovethisbook.com

A towering, sweeping ode

—— thatsmag.com

So alive, so visceral. Every incarnation is raw and vicious. Just amazing. For fans of David Mitchell and Murakami

—— Time Out Bookstore NZ

Barker is a brilliant prose stylist and this book should be read out loud. Even some of the most minor details are charged with social and historical insight... a genuine page turner that brings it all together quite unlike any other book about China published in the past decade.

—— thenanfang.com

Page-turning. A very memorable read.

—— Publishers Weekly

Engrossing. Barker's writing is fluid, and the plotlines and characterizations found in her historical tales, while dark and sinister, are nonetheless intriguing. Misunderstandings abound throughout the novel to unravel the past that collides intensely with the present, ultimately leading to a disquieting finale.

—— Library Journal

Dazzling ... her natural storytelling gifts shine from every paragraph

—— NEW YORK TIMES

Brutal yet seductive, this journey through the darkest parts of the human spirit will leave readers with chills running down their spines.

—— SHELF AWARENESS

Barker skilfully combines history, the supernatural and the everyday in a novel that suggests the apst is never really past, while providing a cracking good read.

—— BOOKPAGE

A deeply human masterpiece.

—— KIRKUS STARRED REVIEW

[A] kaleidoscopically imaginative novel…Barker stitches together an unnervingly perceptive portrait of China and of the enduring influence that its past has on the present.

—— The New Yorker
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