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Starfishing
Starfishing
Dec 5, 2025 11:57 PM

Author:Nicola Monaghan

Starfishing

It's 1997 and party girl Frankie Cavanagh has just started working in the City, experiencing life on the trading floor in all its sweaty, macho madness. She plunges headfirst into the frenzy of the financial markets as well as the drug-fuelled club culture: Frankie works hard, parties hard and gives as good as she gets.

But when she embarks on a dangerous, thrill-seeking affair with her married boss, Frankie begins to lose her grip. Just how far will she go for a dare? In this world of high-octane party nights and high-stake big money deals, a girl could get pushed too far...

Reviews

Monaghan's second novel fizzes along with some verve, capturing the empty heart of the greed-is-good generation

—— Scotland on Sunday

Exciting and fluent... breathtaking in its pursuit of a game-playing relationship, and shocking in its suggestion of a moral vacuum that pulls in the major players

—— Independent

Monaghan - who has a background in finance - is adept at conjuring the giddy excitement and highs of life on the edge. However, the pace and claustrophobic atmosphere also serve to make this an almost unbearably tense read at times

—— Amber Pearson , Daily Mail

No one has written more elegiacally about America... Fitzgerald, like his revered Keats, was a compulsive nostalgic, locating happiness in the search for sensation rather than in its realisation; in the dream of desire, not in its fulfilment

—— Guardian

In just a snatch of dialogue or a few lines of description, Fitzgerald can evoke the happy, troubled and perilous balance of a group of friends... He has an acute eye and ear for the nuances of character... an exquisitely crafted piece of fiction

—— Melissa Benn , Independent

Highly enjoyable

—— Independent on Sunday

Brilliant... An imaginative, colourful page-turner

—— Choice Magazine

Her writing is as wonderful as ever ... You won't be able to tear yourself away

—— Glamour

A compelling blend of murder, lies and revenge. A novel full of intrigue and suspense

—— Waterstone's Book Quarterly

Addictive first novel...this slangy, plosive-packed prose is what makes the book a success...an expert manipulation of syntax keeps things zingy...it is a plus point that the dystopia bears no allegorical weight, thriving purely as an imaginary realm to be taken at face value

—— Sunday Times

This is a darkly funny tale of gangland warfare in Ireland that reads like a fast-paced film

—— Cosmopolitan

It's hilarious and visceral

—— Financial Times

The plot is engrossing, with strong bones, yet sinuous and surprising... Barry plays with words with a manic joy and its this use of language that draws the reader in

—— Time Out

He makes a bold statement, not only about his considerable talent but also his plot to upend the realm of modern Irish literature with a work of such singular scope and voice that it is bound to be the talk of book circles this year and possibly beyond

—— Independent on Sunday

vVolent and bleak and yet somehow full of romance, the driving story and powerful use of language make for a heady experience

—— Erica Wagner , The Times, Books of the Year

Rampaging

—— Sebastian Barry , Guardian, Books of the Year

Knocked me out, big time... The characters are demented but also weirdly familiar; an amazing book altogether

—— Maeve Higgins , Irish Times, Books of the Year

Humour, moxie and a real love of the lingo... A riot of music, gang warfare and a hilarious patois

—— John Butler , Irish Times, Books of the Year

Bohane is a post-apocalyptic, low-tech, dog-eat-dog Irish city - and it's mesmerising. The characters' coarse language is vividly poetic, and there's a peculiar optimism about their lives that comes of living in an atmosphere of heart-stopping brutishness. A unique and fascinating book

—— Claire Looby , Irish Times

The prose flows easily, underpinned with a wry humour that counters the harsh, modern realism

—— Big Issue in the North

A Man of Parts has the lovely, loquacious qualities that typify eccentric wonders such as The War of the Worlds and The History of Mr Polly. David Lodge reminds us that Wells, an imperfect man, is still a worthy witness to his own world and to those worlds that may yet to come.

—— Andrew Tate , Third Way Magazine

Lodge understands the Edwardian literary and political scene extremely well, and traces Wells's entanglements with the louche world of Fabians and free lovers with real intimacy

—— Times Literary Supplement

As protean, elusive but compelling as it's hero, David Lodge's bio-novel about HG Wells breaks all the rules but still grips the reader - like Wells himself

—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent

A wry, racy and absorbing biographical novel

—— Benjamin Evans , Telegraph, Seven Magazine

Lodge knows how to tease the inner man out from behind the historical figure, subjecting Wells to probing interviews throughout the book in which his deeper beliefs and contradictions are laid bare

—— Alastair Mabbot , Herald

This fictionalised version of HG Wells dramatises the author's life, which was full of politics, writing and women

—— Daily Telegraph

David Lodge's HG Wells was both a visionary and a chancer; as arrogant as he was insecure; with as many noble goals as base instincts; a mass of very human contradictions; as Lodge has it, a man of parts

—— Sunday Express
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