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NAMA Mia!
NAMA Mia!
Dec 28, 2025 7:52 AM

Author:Ross O'Carroll-Kelly

NAMA Mia!

It was no country for young men. Or women ...

Unemployment, emigration and do-it-yourself hair colour kits were once again a fact of life. Taxes were on the up, the IMF were on the way and there was a cash for gold outlet in Foxrock Village.

But the signs for recovery were good - for me, at least. I was the chief executive of one of the few businesses turning a profit in this town, a shredding company helping to dispose of the Celtic Tiger's dirty little secrets. And I was getting plenty of love action - as the boy-toy of an attractive sixty-year-old woman who was totally rolling in it. I never imagined myself ending up as a gigolo. But, as the saying goes, where there's a will, there's a way-hey-hey!

With presents galore, sex on demand and a hot meal on the table every night, life was storting to look up again. All I had to do to aovid focking it up was to keep my chinos buttoned. And, well, you can probably guess how that went.

Reviews

Ross's misadventures and on-the-nose observations never fail to provoke a laugh-out-loud reaction ... bursting at the seams with spot-on parody

—— Irish Times

Will leave you with pains in your cheeks from laughing

—— RTÉ Guide on The Oh My God Delusion

Side-achingly funny

—— Sunday Independent

Ross at his best: razor sharp, magnificently plotted and an utter joy to read

—— Irish Mail on Sunday on The Oh My God Delusion

While the writing is as sharp and LOL funny as ever, Ross's complicated relationships ... are movingly explored. The closing pages had this reviewer in tears - and, for once, they weren't of helpless laughter

—— Hot Press on The Oh My God Delusion

A gripping thriller from its first sentence…. Thorpe is a craftsman as well as an artist, and the book is well put together, with respect for the genre. Like William Boyd, Thorpe is a thorough professional. Thorpe convincingly portrays a world in which the means of communication have shrunk the world and made privacy hard to secure

—— Scotsman

Flight blends an unlikely cocktail of genres with great success – think 007 as a middle-aged dad you’re halfway there

—— Metro

Keeps things fizzing along

—— Lesley McDowell , Glasgow Sunday Herald

An excellently plotted book boosted by some fine writing

—— Sunday Business Post

Thorpe’s skill is with sharply observed characters… Taut and compelling

—— James Urquhart , Financial Times

A well-written and exciting Boy’s Own tale for adults

—— Victoria Clark , The Lady

Weaving the stories of wealthy Richard, his meek sister Angela and their families, he draws the strands together to a poignant conclusion

—— Good Housekeeping

As a fan of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time I was expecting this book to be special - and it was. A unique approach to family life and human relationships. Read it!

—— Essentials

An astute and bittersweet comic novel

—— Fanny Blake , Woman and Home

Haddon writes superb books for children, teenagers and grown-ups, and gets every voice in this one dead right...a master craftsman

—— Susan Jefferies , Irish Independent

Honest and thought-provoking book

—— The Economist

Haddon achieves a remarkable mélange of streams of consciousness, snatches of books, music, TV, private thoughts, lists, letters, all intertwined with sharply observed vignettes of everyday banality, soaring flights of description

—— Carol Birch , Guardian

He is almost unrivalled at the notoriously tricky task of giving an authentic voice to children, and his ability to pinpoint the comic aspects of the everyday scenarios that arise on all vacations makes for an amusing read

—— Sunday Times

A beautiful object that will grace any holiday home's unfixably wobbly bedside table. The cover feels like a cracked china plate, decorated with a clever re-working of the willow-pattern; like the contents, it is subtle and clever. Haddon writes superb books for children, teenagers and grown-ups, and gets every voice in this one dead right. He is also a master craftsman, so this complicated narrative moves with the speed and certainty of released, unhappy holidaymakers hitting the homeward road. So shove this in your holidaying bag. You may have made a mistake with the booking, but you won't with the book.

—— Susan Jeffreys , Independent

Haddon has penetrating compassion for even his least prepossessing characters. He’s frequently acute about the details of speech, response and self-presentation that differentiate people, and particularly so about the weird co-existence in us all of animal instincts and higher yearnings: hunger with grief, physical pain with spiritual need, hot lust with the desire to connect. His characters – the whole befuddling gaggle of them – are unquestionably felt, and felt for, and even loved. Haddon has created a family whose problems feel warmly immediate and utterly contemporary.

—— Hannah McGill , Scotland on Sunday

CURL UP WITH…The Red House by Mark Haddon. An English family’s holiday – and the midlife and adolescent crises that erupt during it – is scrutinised from eight points of view in Mark Haddon’s warm and witty novel, which showcases his flair for observational comedy.

—— Metro, Top Things to Do This Weekend

Mark Haddon’s latest is his most mature work to date. It’s mature in terms of both content and style, and reading The Red House there’s a sense that this ‘growing up’ is quite purposely Haddon’s intention. An effortlessly engrossing and richly rewarding read.

—— Miles Fielder , The List

It's an old saying that you choose your friends but not your family and the family reunion has been well-used in literature, but Haddon breathes new life into it. He's never shied away from the difficult subjects and he deals sensitively with a child's burgeoning homosexuality but his real skill, his genius is in his understanding of mental problems, that disassociation between the mind and the brain. It's a book which is so right in every small detail but a gem when taken altogether.

—— The Bookbag

The book gave me the ever-changing, fascinating and the feeling that I was looking through a looking glass. The eight of them have their own secrets, longings and resentments which only make them as human as you and I. The writing zips in montages and sometimes it becomes difficult to figure who is carrying the baton, though once you get used to the writing, it isn’t difficult to figure. The language and symbolism is weaved very well for a story of a dysfunctional family. In some parts, it almost reminded me of Faulkner’s, “The Sound and the Fury”. The Red House by Mark Haddon is a rollercoaster of emotions and all it works surprisingly well and all adds up at the end of the book. I would definitely and most certainly recommend this read for the long summer weekend that comes up.

—— The Hungry Reader

Haddon can marry extraordinary perception with uncluttered language... He also burrows into the minds of his protagonists with astute precision

—— Leyla Sanai , TLS

It looks like Mark Haddon is about to have a great big success all over again

—— David Sexton , Evening Standard

Brilliantly readable… Comic and bittersweet

—— Observer

A closely observed domestic drama…

—— Carol Birch , Guardian

Characteristically original, deftly observed...

—— Mail on Sunday

A beautifully orchestrated novel that gently questions how we define success

—— James Urquhart , Financial Times

[Haddon] shows a knack for portraying family dynamics…

—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald

Mark Haddon proves himself a master of the domestic drama

—— Big Issue in the North

Gripping drama

—— EasyJet Traveller

With its slightly skewed perspective and the relative freshness of its approach, HHhH compels us once again to consider that this, surely, was humanity's lowest point: a war waged, not against those who thwarted Germany's territorial ambitions, but against all that was good and decent in the human soul. In so doing, it confounds those who would decry post-modernism as wilfully obscure, relativistic and lacking in conviction

—— Alastair Mabbott , Herald

French newcomer Laurent Binet hits the ground running in the engrossing novel within a novel

—— Sunday Telegraph

A breezily charming novel, with a thrilling story that also happens to be true, by a gifted young author amusingly anguished over the question of how to tell it … In principle there's nothing not to like about Laurent Binet's acclaimed debut, and HHhH is certainly a thoroughly captivating performance

—— James Lasdun , Guardian

This book fully justifies the lavish praise adorning its author

—— Absolutely Chelsea

Dazzling... It's stunningly brilliant

—— Simon Shaw , Mail on Sunday

Stunning

—— Donal O’Donoghue , RTE Guide

Binet provides both context and impressive detail on the eventual assassination of Heydrich

—— Mark Perryman , Philosophy Footbal
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