Cover Image: The Queen of Dirt Island

The Queen of Dirt Island

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Member Reviews

This book didn't quite grab my attention the way I hoped it would.
I had high expectations but in the end I found I wasn't eager to keep reading.
I liked parts of it. But overall it won't become a favourite.

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I had not really enjoyed the only other Donal Ryan novel I had read, (The Thing About December, well written but depressing), but thought the premise of this one more promising. I’m so glad I read The Queen of Dirt Island! Ryan’s novel about generations of Irish women in one family is beautifully told, seamlessly moving from the beauty of the everyday to shocking and surprising incidents that reverberate through the family and the community. Moving, funny and lyrical.

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This was my first time reading a book from the author but I am delighted to say I thoroughly enjoyed the story and I look forward to reading more books from the writer in the future

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I enjoy books about generations of women and this fitted the bill. It got me looking at more books by Donal Ryan - compelling

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Oh my goodness this book was superb. A story of four generations of Irish women. Everything about this book was wonderful. Fantastic characters, beautifully written words, I adored it.

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This is the second Donal Ryan book that I’ve read. The first was Strange Flowers when the London Irish Centre book club read it in 2022. It was a beautiful story, with deep nuanced characters, and as someone who usually likes a story with an ultimate goal, I really enjoyed the wander through other peoples lives.
The Queen of Dirt Island has that similar comforting ride through someone else’s lives. Things that can seem so mundane day to day are also so familiar and relatable. The way Ryan writes has you right in the middle of these people’s lives in a way that makes you feel that you are right in the room with them.
Ryan also tackles a lot of difficult topics in this book, so it could be triggering for some. The way these topics are handled though is with such care, one is very close to something I’m going through at the moment and although it made me cry I also appreciated the story lines inclusion and the way it was written, shining a light on the loneliness that the issue can bring.
I was also lucky enough to speak to Donal Ryan directly at the London Irish Centre book club zoom meeting and the research and thought put into every bit of the story was so evident. It was a universally loved story by the book club, something that doesn’t happen very often.
It was also interesting to see someone so accomplished, and rightly so, be nervous of the audiences feedback. I relate to this as I;m always astonished that anyone reads and interacts with my ramblings about books!
I would definitely recommend reading one of Ryan’s books, but as said go in carefully if you struggle with some of the heavier topics. I’m really looking forward to reading some more and finding more stories and characters that stay with me long after the book is finished.

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I really enjoyed this tale, and became really attached to the characters. A story about family and love.

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A small Irish village sets the scene for this novel from an Irish best selling author. Saiorse’s life is told from the perspective of fiercely strong female characters, you can imagine their voices carrying outside their homes, the gossip, the emotion, the hardships. Yet they carry on through love for each other and men just seen as an afterthought.

Thanks to Netgalley the author and publishers for a gifted copy of this book in return for an honest review

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This book fell a bit flat for me contrary to what I thought when I requested it. The writing is beautiful and whimsical in places but it did not grab, or hold, my attention. The descriptions of rural Ireland were lovely but the story could have been developed further.

Thanks to Netgalley for the opportunity to read and review this book prior to its purchase.

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Thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for an ARC of this book. I have chosen to write this honest review voluntarily and it reflects my personal opinion.
From the beginning this book uses language which some believe is in everyday use but is not to my taste, and there is quite a lot of colloquial Irish language, some of which was unknown to me. The book is written in an observational style, providing some humour but also glimpses into a darker world. It wasn't to my taste but I believe many readers of contemporary fiction will enjoy this novel.

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Beautifully written, immersive and poignant story of four generations of women living together in rural Ireland, the challenges they face and the changing wider social context around them.

Funny and heartbreaking with characters who leap off the page. Skillfully captures the love, courage and strength of these women and their relationships,

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I will read everything Donal Ryan ever writes! As always, this was another beautiful and immersive read. Set in rural Ireland, The Queen Of Dirt Island is a generational saga centered on the women in one family and the community around them. A powerful ode to the meaning of love.

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Beautifully written and absorbing read set in rural Ireland looking at the women of one particular family through the generations. I could picture each character so clearly and felt like an observer sat on their shoulders. It tackled some big topics and opened my eyes to the realities these ladies were faced with. I did find it a bit slow paced if I'm honest but it was still a beautiful book.

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I remember the first time I read a book by Donal Ryan (The Thing About December) and how I was blown away by his ability to understand and empathise with people. the queen of dirt island is no different.

The book introduces us to the Aylward family, four generations of women, and the love and stories that bind them. Saoirse is our protagonist and you can’t help but fall immediately in love with her. I was desperate to see all her dreams come true.

Ryan writes brilliantly about rural Ireland and in particular its more difficult aspects, and the challenges that come with living there. At its heart, the novel is simply a story about one family and the challenges they face, but it feels much bigger than that. As always with his work, Ryan tackles tougher and darker subjects but with humour sewn throughout. But be warned, while you might laugh, you’ll also cry. I still think about Johnsey Cunliffe from that first book of Ryan’s I ever read.

the queen of dirt island is out now. My thanks to NetGalley and Penguin Books for my copy. This is, as always, an honest review.

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The Queen of Dirt Island is a beautifully written, lyrical and poignant study of four generations of Aylward women who live in rural Tipperary in Ireland. It's set in the same world as his previous novel, Strange Flowers, and this being rural Ireland, it is only right that the lives of the characters from the first novel are intertwined in this story, although the Aylward women remain the focus of the plot.

Ryan writes the female voice convincingly - I might mention Lewis Grassic Gibbon here - and does not shy away from examining what it was like to be a woman in late 20th Century Ireland. This was a time where Mother and Baby homes and Magdalene Laundries still existed, abortion was illegal and women's sexualty was weighed down with shame created by the Catholic Church. The Aylward women are strong in their support for one another through their 'transgressions' but other characters are not so lucky, often with tragic consequence.

The support of the four generations - Mary, Eileen, Saoirse and Pearl respectively - have for one another gives a sense of hope that the world they live is survivable and that it doesn't have to be a life filled with shame or controlled by the men in the novel, who often make questionable decisions which do nothing to improve the lives of the families around them. Or are just assholes.

I liked the short chapters the book is written in, it kept me powering on through, although this may not be to everyone's taste. The ups and downs of the relationships between the Aylward women are an honest portrayal of family life and show that life is full of both light and shade. I liked the short chapters the book is written in, it kept me powering on through, and allowed for a considered portrayal of some of the darker plotlines without overshadowing times of happiness.

With thanks to #Netgalley for access to a review copy in exchange for a fair and honest review. The Queen of Dirt Island has been nominated for An Post novel of 2022.

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Excellent read, so different.

Thanks to Netgalley and the publishers for letting me access this book in exchange for my honest feedback.

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"Stories were everywhere. You could listen or you could choose not to, but the stories would find their way to all ears eventually, and you could believe them or you could choose not to."

This stunning novel about four generations of women swept me up with its carefully crafted language (it's like reading poetry), lush descriptions of its setting (the Irish countryside), and its deeply moving plot.

It begins with an ending: a young man says goodbye to his young wife and newborn daughter, gets in his car to go to work, just to meet his death on the road. But even as Eileen Aylward is widowed, she's not alone. She has a particularly close bond with her mother-in-law, Mary. The two yell and swear at each other, as lovingly as such things can be done, so that the little girl, Saoirse never really feels the loss of her father. Instead, she grows up in a household of two strong, witty and fiercely compassionate women.

Later, when Saoirse finds herself pregnant at just 17, her mother curses and yells and threatens to throw her out. It's mostly hot air though. While Eileen is disappointed with her daughter, her love knows no bounds and a fourth generation is, while not conceived in love, born into love. Pearl is just that - the jewel of her family, the one who'll end the story, with a beginning.

The book traces the women's relationships with men who come, stay and, mostly (eventually), go. The women's power lies in each other, in their unbreakable familial bond.

I'd never read this author and not having come across his particular Irish name before, assumed he was she. Because THAT's how well these women are written. They are flawed, complex, gorgeous characters. I adored this book and can only hope many, many readers can feast on it.

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Donal Ryan is an excellent story teller and in his latest novel we follow the lives of four generations of the Aylwards. The story concentrates on the strong women living in a rural Irish community. At the beginning of the story Eileen’s husband dies and it appears that a number of men in the family have died and those left are cruel or weak and feckless.
Eileen with Nana, her mother in law, raises her daughter Saoirse. We follow Saoirse growing up and coming of age in a traditional rural farming community with its prejudice and misogyny.
The story is beautifully written and although dark there is also wonderful humour.
I thoroughly enjoyed the novel and highly recommend.

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I've now read a few of Donal Ryan's works and this is another gloriously lyrical piece of writing, exploring generations of women in an Irish family. Moving and tender, Ryan creates very human characters that make you care, and all set in the beautiful and harsh Irish landscape. Ryan is surely one of the best 'new-ish' writers around today. A very strong 4 stars.

(With thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for an ARC of this title.)

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Irish women and the men who infiltrate the families of the eternally bonded and loyal women who live through the generations together.
All is well no matter what occurs

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