Author:Aingeala Flannery

WINNER of the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year 2023
WINNER of the John McGahern Prize 2023
'Unputdownable . . . one of the best novels of the year' Sunday Independent
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In the seaside town of Tramore, County Waterford, visitors arrive in waves with the tourist season, reliving the best days of their childhoods in its caravan parks, chippers and amusement arcades.
Local teenager Helen Grant is indifferent to the charm of her surroundings; she dreams of escaping to art college with her glamorous classmate Stella Swaine and, from there, taking on the world. But leaving Tramore is easier said than done. Though they don't yet know it, Helen and Stella's lives are pulled by tides beyond their control.
Following the Grant and Swaine families and their neighbours over three decades, The Amusements is a luminous and unforgettable story about roads taken and not taken - and a brilliantly observed portrait of a small-town community.
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'THIS BOOK is EVERYTHING'Marian Keyes
'Flannery's flawed, hopeful characters live and grow on the page' ANNE ENRIGHT, author of The Gathering
'Quietly beautiful . . . Flannery's characters are very well drawn, as is her understanding of small-town mores and idle gossip. It's a book that leaves and impression long after the final page' IRISH INDEPENDENT
'Effortless, perceptive, and hugely entertaining - I loved it' DONAL RYAN, author of Strange Flowers
'A cracker of a book' KATHLEEN MAC MAHON, author of Nothing But Blue Sky
'Fantastic . . . we were gripped' STELLAR
'If you like dark humour, superbly drawn characters, caravan parks, fish suppers and slot machines, The Amusements is what you've been waiting for' JAN CARSON, author of The Fire Starters
'A joy to read' LOUISE NEALON, author of Snowflake
'A brilliant book. I loved meeting all these characters, who jumped off the page and stayed in my head' RÓISÍN INGLE
'Brilliant. Dramatic, heartfelt, sometimes shocking and sad' IRISH EXAMINER
If you like dark humour, superbly drawn characters, caravan parks, fish suppers and slot machines, The Amusements is what you've been waiting for
—— Jan CarsonBrilliant. Dramatic, heartfelt, sometimes shocking and sad
—— Sue Leonard , Irish ExaminerUnputdownable . . . one of the best novels of the year
—— Estelle Birdy , Sunday IndependentThe writing, so true to small-town life, is both shrewd and enlarging. Flannery writes like a grown-up; her flawed, hopeful characters live and grow on the page
—— Anne EnrightIts effortless evocations of the tides and pulls of small-town life are note perfect . . . It's often very funny, sometimes sad, always authentic and perceptive, and hugely entertaining. Beautiful
—— Donal RyanA cracker of a book. Think Kevin Barry crossed with Elizabeth Strout. The writing is that good
—— Kathleen Mac Machon[The setting of] Tramore is not only a character - it is the main character of The Amusements, with its quotidian dramas and failed epiphanies and the magnetic pull it has over everyone who encounters it, from those on a family holiday, to those who are born, bred and die there. It was a joy to read
—— Louise NealonA fascinating portrait of small-town life. A joy to read
—— Sunday IndependentA fresh, funny, fiercely Irish novel about the vagaries of friendship, and Aingeala Flannery - wholly in charge of her lovable, eccentric cast - writes like a dream
—— Nuala O'ConnorA vibrant, evocative debut that brings the exploits of an Irish coastal town brilliantly to life
—— Sarah GilmartinA deft collage of a novel. Ambitious and fun . . . a wonderful debut
—— Alan McMonagleA brilliant book. I loved meeting all these characters, who jumped off the page and stayed in my head. Aingeala Flannery is a real talent
—— Róisín IngleThe Amusements kept me up half the night. Aingeala Flannery is a brilliant writer. Her sentences crackle with life, energy and devastating insight into the human condition. She writes with a rare combination of compassion and black humour. Her characters live on in my mind like people I have always known
—— Lia MillsA fantastic debut novel . . . it paints a vivid picture of this seaside town, we were gripped
—— Stellar[Flannery] skilfully observes life in a small town and roads that are dreamed of but not taken. Characters that have a great sense of longing & yearning to leave this town behind, and yet somehow always get pulled back. A great read!
—— Sinéad MoriartyAs addictive as slot machines and as exhilarating as waltzers. A great sense of place and compelling characters
—— Martin Doyle[Carries] notes of Donal Ryan and Roddy Doyle for me . . . A nostalgic masterpiece, loaded with possibility and weighed down with reality, guaranteed to be this summer's must-read
—— Waterford News and StarSharp as a vogue tomato slicer, it's seaside Ireland minus the dreary caravan mentality or sentimentality
—— June CaldwellIf you buy just one novel next month make sure to buy Aingeala Flannery's debut. Funny, sad and most of all beautifully written
—— Eoin DevereuxA compelling and satisfying read
—— Hot PressBrilliant
—— Irish Daily MailI loved it - so good
—— Elaine FeeneyGlorious
—— IMAGEBeautiful
—— Ryan TubridyLike [William] Trevor, a wry wit permeates Flannery's storytelling
—— Irish TimesFlannery's depiction of the sounds, smells and seediness of the typical seaside resort is sharp and vivid
—— Sunday TimesCharming and empathetic . . . Flannery's immense skill lies in her ability to inhabit such a wide range of characters, stepping into their shoes and capturing the nuance of each voice, each set of hopes and dreams and private, devastating heartaches
—— IndependentTHIS BOOK is EVERYTHING. The characters are painfully, beautifully real, the writing is IMPECCABLE. Brutally honest about what we want for ourselves versus what we actually get, I LOVED it
—— Marian KeyesBlackly funny
—— Business PostImpossibly compelling
—— RTÉ CultureMy book of the year . . . I loved every page
—— Gearóid FarrellyFlannery excels at working that counterpoint of dark and light, comedy in the face of tragedy . . . A brilliant debut
—— Anglo-CeltQuietly beautiful . . . Flannery's characters are very well drawn, as is her understanding of small-town mores and idle gossip. It's a book that leaves and impression long after the final page
—— Irish IndependentAn amazing story
—— Amie McAuley , Belfast Telegraph






