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House of Names
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About the Author

Colm Tóibín was born in Enniscorthy in 1955. He is the author of nine novels including The Master, Brooklyn, The Testament of Mary and Nora Webster and, most recently, House of Names. His work has been shortlisted for the Booker three times, won the Costa Novel Award and the Impac Award. He has also published two collections of stories and many works of non-fiction. He lives in Dublin.

Reviews

Part of Toibin's success comes down to the power of his writing: an almost unfaultable combination of artful restraint and wonderfully observed detail . . . Unforgettable
*New York Times*

A giant amongst storytellers, Toibin has thrown down the gauntlet with his latest novel . . . And it is a masterpiece
*Daily Telegraph*

A gorgeous stylist, Tóibín captures the subtle flutterings of consciousness better than any writer alive . . . Never before has Tóibín demonstrated such range, not just in tone but in action. He creates the arresting, hushed scenes for which he's so well known just as effectively as he whips up murders that compete, pint for spilled pint, with those immortal Greek playwrights
*Washington Post*

Brilliant retelling of a Greek Tragedy... This is a novel that is a celebration of what novels can do.
*Observer*

Considerable Game of Thrones appeal...instead of cheap narrative tricks and resolutions we're left with images of desolation and thwarted love
*Financial Times*

A devastatingly human story...savage, sordid and hauntingly believable
*Guardian*

The book has a controlled hushed quality, like that of a Morandi still life, which only serves to heighten the terror and pity of the tale
*John Banville*

Colm Tóibín turns Greek Myths into flesh and blood..The writing is characteristically elegant, spare and subtle. ..The scenes between Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus darkly sexy
*The Times*

An extraordinarily sympathetic and intimate portrait
*Literary Review*

In Toibin's careful hands, the story of Clytemnestra, who avenges her daughter after her husband Agamemnon sacrifices her to secure safe passage from Troy, is told with such a vivid grasp of the emotional pulse that even those who know the story well will be transfixed.
*Daily Mail*

What is truly miraculous, though, is how Tóibín has made us sympathize with people who do terrible, unthinkable things
*Boston Globe*

A dramatic, intimate chronicle of a family implosion set in unsettling times
*Publishers' Weekly*

If there is a more brilliant writer than Tóibín working today, I don't know who that would be
*Karen Joy Fowler*

This is a novel about the way the members of a family keep secrets from one another, tell lies and make mistakes.. .
*Literary Review*

Tóibín's retelling is governed by compassion and responsibility, and focuses on the horrors that led Clytemnestra to her terrible vengeance. Her sympathetic first-person narrative makes even murder, for a moment, seem reasonable (...) Tóibín's prose is precise and unadorned, the novel's moments of violence told with brutal simplicity. But its greatest achievement is as a page-turner. In a tale that has ended the same way for thousands of years, Tóibín makes us hope for a different outcome
*The Economist*

[An] intense, thought-provoking and original novel . . . Toibin's book transforms this ancient story into a lyrical, melancholy meditation on closeted desire, which implicitly comments on the aftermath of the Irish Troubles'
*TLS*

Graphic, vicious, beautiful retelling of ancient myths.... Ultimately the book is a stark, timeless and brilliantly rendered tale of power in a world, as ever, riven by conflict.
*'I' Newspaper*

In a novel describing one of the Western world's oldest legends, in which the gods are conspicuous by their absence, Tóibín achieves a paradoxical richness of characterisation and a humanisation of the mythological, marking House Of Names as the superbly realised work of an author at the top of his game.
*Daily Express*

A spellbinding adaptation of the Clytemnestra myth, House of Names considers the Mycenaen queen in all her guises: grieving mother, seductress, ruthless leader - and victim of the ultimate betrayal.
*Vogue*

A haunting story, largely because Tóibín tells it in spare, resonant prose...
*New Statesman*

A Greek House of Cards... Just like Heaney at the end of his Mycenae lookout, Toibin's novel augurs an era of renewal that comes directly from the cessation of hostilities.
*Irish Times*

The book's mastery of pacing and tone affirm the writer as one of our finest at work today.
*Irish Independent*

A daring, and triumphant return, to the Oresteia... bleakly beautiful twilight of the Gods.
*The Arts Desk*

It couldn't have been done better
*Scotsman*

A visceral reworking of Oresteia
*Observer*

The escalation of violence and desire for revenge has deliberate echoes of the Irish Troubles
*Observer Books of the Year*

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