Description
Book SynopsisMartina Devlin, an award-winning columnist for the Irish Independent and podcaster for Dublin City of Literature #CityofBooks, has delivered a new novel based on the life of Edith Somerville of 'Somerville and Ross' fame - authors of The Irish R.M. In this work, set during the turbulent period of Irish Independence 1921-22, Somerville finds herself at a crossroads. Her position as a member of the Ascendancy is perilous as she struggles to keep her family home, Drishane House in West Cork, while others are burned out. After years in a successful writing partnership with Violet Martin, Edith continues to write after her partner's death, comforted in the belief they continue to connect through automatic writing and seances. Against a backdrop of Civil War politics and lawlessness erupting across the country via IRA flying columns, people across Ireland are forced to consider where their loyalties lie. In Edith, Devlin limns a vivid historical context in this story of proto-feminist Edith Somerville courageously trying to keep home and heart in one piece.
Trade Review'delicious dark tension and gothic sensibility ... she exhibits a rare genius in delivering a layered, palimpsestic text full of themes that speak to the contemporary reader ... The novel feels so truthful: it is as if Devlin embarked on her own automatic-writing session with Edith Somerville and tapped into the candle-flamed reality of those tumultuous times.' Rosemary Jenkinson, Dublin Review of Books ; 'This is a gorgeous book, beautifully researched and with a fabulous cameo from Flurry Knox. Edith is worth getting to know.' Sinead Crowley ; 'an immersive, entertaining rollercoaster.' Susan McKeever, Books Ireland ; 'As a journalist, Martina Devlin knows a good story, so when she began to delve into the fascinating life and times of Edith Somerville, she had found someone who she knew would come alive on the page.' Irish Examiner ; 'Devlin's writing is warm and witty. She captures dialogue brilliantly, so the book flies by in a flurry of conversation while her prose descriptions are frequently superb too ... As a character, Edith is well realised with all her contradictions and eccentricities ... Devlin's novel is a tender portrait of a nearly forgotten character who springs into life on the page.' John Walshe, Sunday Business Post