Synopses & Reviews
A lyrical novel set in America and Ireland from the Story Prizewinning author of The Hill Road
As he did so masterfully in the connected novellas of The Hill Road, Patrick OKeeffes first novel moves back and forth in time and place to weave the story of two Irish families forever linked by love, secrets, and their heritage.
James Dwyer was born in rural county Limerick before moving to Dublin as a teenager and ultimately settling in Ann Arbor. One night Jamess past appears in the form of a down-and-out man named Walter, who issues an invitation for James to come to Upstate New York to visit his old childhood neighbor, Kevin Lyons. Although neither James nor Kevin particularly cares for each other, theres no denying their complicated past. Kevin and Jamess sister, Tess, were lovers while James fell hard for Kevins sister, Una.
Illuminating the precarious balance of family intimacies and how stories can carry over from one generation to the next, OKeeffes The Visitors further delivers on the elegant prose and plotting that earned him critical acclaim and the Story Prize for The Hill Road.
Review
“A remarkable achievement . . . There is a wonderful Irish music running through O’Keeffe’s prose, yet his tales of ordinary rural life in twentieth-century Ireland are unsparing and never sentimental.” —
The Baltimore Sun
“Handsome, subtle narratives by an exquisitely talented Irish-born writer.” —Elle
“Lush and evocative . . . a dreamlike collection.” —The New York Times Book Review
Review
Advance Praise for The Visitors by Patrick OKeeffe
“Delivers a devastating emotional wallop. . .The novel is heedless of time, meandering back and forth through James Dwyers life and the lives of his forbears. . .We learn, gradually, of the inextricable bonds between the Lyons family and the Dwyers back in in Country Limerick, about the affairs and tragedies of aunts, fathers, brothers, sisters. . .by the time all is revealed, the reader is captivated and moved.”—Publishers Weekly
“How well Patrick O'Keeffe knows the difficulties of leaving the past behind. I am full of admiration for his long view of history and family and the way he gradually reveals both in this wonderfully intelligent novel. The Visitors is a work of many pleasures.”—Margot Livesey
“In Patrick O'Keeffe's The Visitors, the past is constantly catching up to, and overtaking, the present, and the result is haunted and beautiful book that culminates in violence that's both inevitable and surprising. A wonderful first novel.”—Charles Baxter
“The tangle of family life—the perils of escape, the perils of staying—is written into a novel of rare emotional authenticity. Ireland and America keep offering eye-opening surprises here, as The Visitors--unsentimental, unflinching, poignant in the most convincing way--shows how home and the past keep changing their meanings.”—Joan Silber
“Patrick OKeeffes first novel is a masterful one, moving deftly back and forth in time and place while evoking rural Ireland through musical prose. But at its heart The Visitors is the tale of a haunted man named James Dwyer, who discovers that no matter how far across the ocean he travels, he remains forever bound by love and memory to home.”—Amy Greene
Synopsis
Born and raised on a dairy farm in rural County Limerick, Ireland, Patrick OKeeffe has penned an accomplished debut with
The Hill Road, unveiling the precarious balance of family intimacies played out in the timeless and cloistered world of the Irish farm country. OKeeffes four linked novellas span time and generations, and each brims with gorgeous, thoughtful prose and enduring characters.
Love and secrets, unfulfilled dreams and missed opportunities, fear, greed, and compromised moral decisions all leave their mark here. A dairy farmer unknowingly falls in love with the younger sister of a woman he once cruelly jilted. A young man recalls his spinster aunt and the tragic story of her lifes great lovea soldier who returned alive but altered by the Great War.
A richly rewarding work that will resonate with fans of William Trevor and Alice Munro, The Hill Road heralds the arrival of an important new voice.
Synopsis
O'Keeffe's debut novel unveils the precarious balance of family intimacies played out in the timeless and cloistered world of the Irish farm country. His four linked novellas span time and generations and each brims with thoughtful prose and enduring characters.
Synopsis
"A remarkable achievement . . . There is a wonderful Irish music running through O'Keeffe's prose, yet his tales of ordinary rural life in twentieth-century Ireland are unsparing and never sentimental."
-The Baltimore Sun
"Handsome, subtle narratives by an exquisitely talented Irishborn writer."
-Elle
"Lush and evocative . . . a dreamlike collection."
-The New York Times Book Review
Synopsis
Winner of the 2005 Story Prize Reminiscent of Alice Munro and William Trevor, Patrick O'Keeffe's lyrical eloquence expressively unveils the cloistered world of a rural southwestern Irish town and its inhabitants. Brimming with thoughtful, gorgeous prose and linked by setting and circumstances that span generations, the four novellas in The Hill Road revolve around the parish of Kilroan and its inhabitants, and how, over time, the people and the community itself are transfigured by life-changing events. Marked by love, devotion, secrets, unfulfilled dreams, family intimacies, and missed opportunities, these characters embody the rugged unfolding of the landscape-a volatile place of natural beauty where stories alter lives.
About the Author
Patrick O’Keeffe emigrated from Ireland to the United States in the mid-1980s and received a degree in English from the University of Kentucky. In 1998, O’Keeffe was accepted into the MFA writing program at the University of Michigan, where he studied with Nicholas Delbanco, Charles Baxter, and Eileen Pollack. He is now a lecturer at the University of Michigan.