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Close to Home

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

While growing up in West Belfast, Sean does every­thing he's supposed to do. He works hard, he studies, and he - mostly - stays out of trouble. The thirty-year conflict is over, he's told, and his future is lit with promise.
But when Sean returns home from university, he finds much of the same-the same friends doing the same gear in the same clubs; the same lost broth­ers and mad fathers; the same closed doors; the same silences. There are no jobs, Sean's degree isn't worth the paper it's written on, and no one will give him the time of day. One night, he assaults a stranger at a party, and everything begins to come undone.
Close to Home begins with this sudden act of violence and expands into a startling portrait of working-class Ireland under the long shadow of the Troubles. It's a first novel drawn from life, written with the immediacy of thought. It's about what happens when men get desperate, about the cycles of loss and trauma and secrecy that keep them trapped, and about the struggle to get free.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 27, 2023
      Magee debuts with a consummate and searching bildungsroman of a young Belfast man trying to square his future with a painful heritage. It’s 2013, and Sean has just earned an English degree in Liverpool, his departure from Belfast alone a feat among his old mates, who came of age with no prospects in the wake of the 2008 recession. Now he’s back home, squatting in a dodgy flat, stealing groceries to survive, and trying to hold down a nightclub job while getting blasted on cocaine and vodka with his friends. The sectarian violence of the Troubles is in the rearview, but the memories are ever-present. His mother, whom he moves back in with after the squat is repossessed, used to hide guns in their house when he was a little boy; and his estranged father narrowly avoided execution by the IRA. In a poignant series of revelations, Magee shows why Sean’s father was targeted, why he was saved, and why Sean doesn’t see him anymore. Along the way, Sean serves out a community service sentence for assault, another event that Sean gradually unpacks in his thoughtful narration. He also makes new friends from nearby Queen’s University, who offer glimmers of a different life. Magee demonstrates profound psychological acuity and a keen sense of place, showing how Belfast has shaped his characters and how the past is etched into the streets. His strongest achievement is in the sensitive portrait of Sean, who doesn’t want to lie to himself and eventually works up to the truth. Readers won’t want this to end.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from April 1, 2023
      A young man in Northern Ireland sees little hope of escape from hard times in this persuasive debut. Sean Maguire returns home to Belfast with a university degree in literature and no prospects. A recession has eroded the job market, and serving drinks in a nightclub doesn't pay much. As his narrative opens, he's 22, sharing a mold-ridden flat that's soon to be repossessed, cheating the supermarket's self-checkout for free food, and drifting from one binge to another. A violent assault lands him in court, where 200 hours of community service and a hefty fine add to his woes. His family is haunted by his father's sexual abuse of Sean's older brother when he was a child. And 20 years after the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, Sean's contemporaries see few gains in the wake of the Troubles, with its legacy of trauma and bitterness. Magee's is a dark tale but rather understated when compared with the extreme sorts of dead-enders found in Rob Doyle's Here Are the Young Men (set in Dublin) and Gabriel Krauze's Who They Was (in London). What's especially plausible are the many snares that even an intelligent fellow like Sean falls into because of self-pity or laziness or that old reliable demon, peer pressure, thanks to enabling childhood buddies. Only a chance meeting with an old friend--one of the two strong female characters, along with Sean's mother--suggests that a better life is within reach. Mair�ad was "always getting into all sorts of trouble with the peelers" (police), but she went to university and crucially found a better life afterward with fellow graduates. As she says, "I made new friends." That sounds simplistic, but the key is the inverse: She avoided the old friends, the old snares. An impressive coming-of-age tale enriched by its bleak setting.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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