Reader Score
95%
95% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 21 reviews on
**OPRAH'S BOOK CLUB PICK, DECEMBER 2024**
**NEW YORK TIMES BOOK CLUB PICK, DECEMBER 2024**
NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE STARRING CILLIAN MURPHY
A New York Times Bestseller - Shortlisted for the 2022 Booker Prize - Winner of the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction
One of the New York Times's 100 Best Books of the 21st Century
"A hypnotic and electrifying Irish tale that transcends country, transcends time." --Lily King, New York Times bestselling author of Writers & Lovers
Small Things Like These is award-winning author Claire Keegan's landmark new novel, a tale of one man's courage and a remarkable portrait of love and family
It is 1985 in a small Irish town. During the weeks leading up to Christmas, Bill Furlong, a coal merchant and family man faces into his busiest season. Early one morning, while delivering an order to the local convent, Bill makes a discovery which forces him to confront both his past and the complicit silences of a town controlled by the church.
An international bestseller, Small Things Like These is a deeply affecting story of hope, quiet heroism, and empathy from one of our most critically lauded and iconic writers.
Claire Keegan's works of fiction are internationally acclaimed and have been translated into thirty languages. Antarctica won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Walk the Blue Fields won the Edge Hill Prize for the finest collection of stories published in the British Isles. Foster won the Davy Byrnes Award -- the world's richest prize for a short story. Small Things Like These was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Rathbones Folio Prize. It won the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction and The Kerry Prize for Irish Novel of the Year. She was awarded Woman of the Year for Literature in Ireland, 2022, and Author of the Year, 2023.
Praise for Small Things Like These:
Shortlisted for the Booker Prize
Winner of the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction
Longlisted for the 2023 Dublin Literary Award
An NPR "Books We Love" selection
A Chicago Public Library "Best of the Best" selection
People Magazine's "Book of the Week"
A Publishers
Weekly "Holiday Gift Guide" selection
A Vanity Fair Best Short Books selection
"At the opening of Small Things Like These,
one immediately senses that Keegan is breathing something vital into the
season's most cherished tales, until, as gently as snow falling, her little
book accrues the unmistakable aura of a classic... From the elements of this simple existence in an
inconsequential town, Keegan has carved out a profoundly moving and universal
story...Small Things Like These reminds us that the real miracle in any
season is courage. Get two copies: one to keep, one to give."--Washington Post
"I haven't stopped thinking about [this] book, both because of Keegan's luminous prose and because of the crisis of conscience that unspools within its pages." -- The New Yorker, "The Year in Reading" Selection
"For all her earlier accolades, Small Things
Like These, Keegan's first novel, enters the world this month with the
shocking force of a debut...Over what would amount to a couple of chapters in
another novel, Keegan manages to place her characters and her readers at the
center of an essential human dilemma: Will we turn a blind eye to evil in our
midst, or will we take some action against it, even if it consists of just one
small thing? As Keegan's concise, capacious new book demonstrates, little acts
can lead to real change."--Los Angeles Times
"Keegan's precisely considered details about
character, setting, memory, and dramatic moment create a story you will want to
read again and again. Her deceptively simple language is pitch-perfect."--Boston
Globe
"This exquisite miniature of a novel somehow
defies the gravitational pull of its grim subject to hover in a quotidian,
luminous present. Details materialize with preternatural clarity. The milky
light of a winter afternoon, mist on a river, a woman opening an oven door, a
child taking her father's hand: We see these things and feel their lingering
presence as we are drawn into the life of an unassuming man in an unremarkable
place."--The Wall Street Journal
"Claire Keegan...now gives us her best work yet. Small
Things Like These is a short, wrenching, thoroughly brilliant novel
mapping the path of one man's conscience, its torment and vacillation between
two courses of action. Either one bears a price...Spare and potent, this is a
remarkable story." --Minneapolis Star Tribune
"The way a Keegan story unfolds is like it's happening to you, with a sense of tension and the suspicion of high stakes. Her prose is crisp and transportive, and full of a mastery of her homeland's language and context," -- Vanity Fair
"A sparse, breathtaking perfect gem of a novel."--People
"Small
Things Like These is a gem of a slim novel about a family man faced
with a moral decision... a
deeply moving tale."--Associated Press
"Keegan
captured and affected my whole attention. She draws a web of complicity around
the convent's activities that is chillingly mundane and brutally true. These
kinds of places existed not just because of the cruelty of the people who ran
them, but also because of the fear and selfishness of those who were willing to
ignore them. Stunning. Just stunning."--Catherine
Whelan, NPR
"Claire Keegan is mighty." -- London Review of Books
"The novel isn't just an
eloquent attack on [Magdalene] laundries, however. It is also a touching
Christmas tale, genuinely reminiscent of the festive stories of O Henry and
Charles Dickens; a novel that has been seeped in sherry and served by the
fireside...As soon as you pick the novel up, it's all over. The monumental power
of Claire Keegan is that she can create these cuckoo-clock narratives where
every single word seems to be a necessary contribution to the overall mechanism
of the novel. She is all killer, no filler. ...How lucky we are to have Keegan, a
genuine once-in-a-generation writer whose dedication to her craft is as
meticulous as it is masterly."--The Times (UK)
"Small Things Like These is a hypnotic and electrifying Irish tale that transcends country, transcends time. Claire Keegan's sentences make my heart pound and my knees buckle and I will always read everything she writes."--Lily King, author of Writers & Lovers
"In Small Things Like These, Claire Keegan creates scenes with astonishing clarity and lucidity. This is the story of what happened in Ireland, told with sympathy and emotional accuracy. From winter skies to the tiniest tick of speech to the baking of a Christmas cake, Claire Keegan makes her moments real--and then she makes them matter."--Colm Tóibín, author of The Magician
"Small Things Like These is not just about Ireland, it's about the world, and it asks profound questions about complicity, about the hope and difficulty of change, and the complex nature of restitution... A single one of Keegan's grounded, powerful sentences can contain volumes of social history. Every word is the right word in the right place, and the effect is resonant and deeply moving."--Hilary Mantel, author of The Mirror and the Light
"A book that makes you excited to discover everything its author has ever written... Absolutely beautiful."--Douglas Stuart, author of Shuggie Bain
"Marvellous -- exact and icy and loving all at once."--Sarah Moss, author of Ghost Wall
"A true gift of a book... Reading it brings a sublime Chekhovian shock."--Andrew O'Hagan, author of Be Near Me
"I'm now reading it for the third time. This little book moved me so much. And I have been carrying it everywhere with me, underlying favorite passages (too many!). This book is a prayer, an elixir of courage, a school of life, a healing balm for our sorrows, a song to human kindness, and a gift of hope."--Aggie Zivaljevic, Kepler's Books (Menlo Park, CA)
Praise for Walk the Blue Fields:
"The best stories here are so textured and moving, so universal but utterly distinctive, that it's easy to imagine readers savoring them many years from now. And to imagine critics, far in the future, deploying lofty new terms to explain what it is that makes Keegan's fiction work." --Maud Newton, New York Times Book Review
"These stories are pure magic. They add, using grace, intelligence and an extraordinary ear for rhythm, to the distinguished tradition of the Irish short story. They deal with Ireland now, but have a sort of timeless edge to them, making Claire Keegan both an original and a canonical presence in Irish fiction." --Colm Tóibín
"Keegan is that rarest of writers--someone I will always want to read." --Richard Ford, "Best Books of 2007" pick in The Irish Times
"Perfect short stories . . . flawless structure . . . What makes this collection a particular joy is the run and pleasure of the language." --Anne Enright, Guardian
"A young Irish prodigy . . . Writing in a striking, Celtic-slanted prose, Keegan exposes the hearts, hopes and dreams of those in the Irish countryside. . . . The collection unfolds powerfully, with stories that chronicle an isolated young woman's discovery of seemingly magical powers, incest in a desperate Irish farm family and the disintegration of marriages. . . . astonishing." --Alan Cheuse, NPR's All Things Considered
"[Keegan's] . . . collections have drawn comparisons to William Trevor and Anton Chekhov . . . [She] crafts stories out of small details and insight . . . like poetry. . . . Claire Keegan is the real deal." --Keith Donohue, NPR.com ("You Must Read This")
"[A] stunning second collection . . . Keegan's stories are the literary counterparts to Picasso's Blue Period paintings. . . . Keegan's first collection, Antarctica, led to comparisons with Raymond Carver, but Annie Proulx, with her distilled, poetic prose and attunement to remote landscapes, is a closer match." --Heller McAlpin, San Francisco Chronicle
"These short fictions by the Irish author Claire Keegan haven't a style so much as a microclimate, a chill mist blowing in on a hard wind off the sea. . . . The author's own storytelling powers have darkened and matured since her first collection, as she takes confident command of her craft." --Amanda Heller, The Boston Globe
"Hope lurks somewhere in almost all [Keegan's] stories. . . . You start out on the paths of these simple, rural lives, and not long into each, some bit of rage or unforgivable transgression bubbles up . . . Then the truly amazing happens: Life goes on, limps along, heads for some new chance at beauty." --Susan Salter Reynolds, Los Angeles Times Book Review
"Walk the Blue Fields may be among the best books you will read this year. . . . Keegan's writing offers stark, intelligent flourishes and a look into the heart of rural Ireland, gurgling with desolate undercurrents." --Vikram Johri, St. Petersburg Times
"Keegan's debut collection, Antarctica, garnered comparisons with fellow Irish author William Trevor. Her follow-up has confirmed that she belongs in that fine story-telling tradition that harks back to Anton Chekhov. Sparse, bleak and unsentimental, her stories suggest that the only thing men and women truly share is the loneliness that confines them." --Angel Gurria-Quintana, Financial Times
"A note-perfect short story is something a very few people can produce. The Irish writer Claire Keegan does it in her second collection of stories. . . . Immaculate structure, a lovely, easy flow of language, and a certain stony-eyed realism about human experience; she is very much part of an Irish tradition, but a unique craftswoman for all that." --Hilary Mantel, New Statesman
"Exquisite stories, so intricately wrought, so strange and beguiling as to entirely bewitch." --The Guardian
"Like Chekhov, Keegan has the ability to sum up a life, or a significant chunk of one, in apparently trivial, quotidian events. . . . in a voice that is lyrical, thoughtful, but with a thick, dark strain of melancholy running through it." --Sunday Independent (5 stars)
"Powerful . . . The two foremost contemporary masters of the [short story] form, Alistair MacLeod and John McGahern, know that tradition can live even in the lament for its passing . . . Claire Keegan is their true successor, a writer already touched by greatness." --Declan Kiberd, The Irish Times