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Haven (SIGNED)

Haven (SIGNED)

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Haven (SIGNED)

by Donoghue, Emma

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  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Fine, as new, signed on special half-title
ISBN 10
152909111X
ISBN 13
9781529091113
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Seller rating:
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Maidenhead, Berkshire, United Kingdom
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About This Item

London: Picador, 2022. 1st. h/b. Fine, as new, signed on special half-title. 8vo (230 x 150 / 9"" x 6""). The highly anticipated novel from the internationally bestselling author of The Pull of the Stars and Room 'Haven is everything a novel should be: compassionate, unpredictable, and questioning. This is Donoghue at her strange, unsettling best.' - Maggie O'Farrell, author of Hamnet 'Combines pressure-cooker intensity and radical isolation, to stunning effect.' Ð Margaret Atwood via Twitter Three men vow to leave the world behind them and start anew . . . In seventh-century Ireland, a scholar and priest called Artt has a dream telling him to leave the sinful world behind. Taking two monks Ð young Trian and old Cormac Ð he travels down the river Shannon in search of an isolated spot on which to found a monastery. Drifting out into the Atlantic, the three men find an impossibly steep, bare island inhabited by tens of thousands of birds, and claim it for God. Their extraordinary landing spot is now known as Skellig Michael. But in such a place, far from all other humanity, what will survival mean? Haunting, moving and vividly told, Haven displays Emma DonoghueÕs trademark world-building and psychological intensity Ð but this tale is like nothing she has ever written before . . .

Reviews

On Aug 22 2022, a reader said:
"Stray beams shard through gaps in the vast sky. The clouds shift, the light tints the Great Skellig brown, then grey, then green, as if God's nib is inking in an illustration. Land and sea like opposite pages, intricate and bejewelled with colour, in a book laid open for all to read."

Haven is the twelfth novel by Irish-born Canadian author, Emma Donoghue. During his stay at Cluain Mhic Nois monastery by the River Sionan on the Isle of Hibernia, Artt, a priest, scholar and hermit whose reputation for piety and conversion precedes him, cannot help but notice how poorly many of the monks, even the Abbot, observe their vows of poverty and chastity. He notes their greed, laziness, spite and lust with distaste.

Perhaps it shouldn't be a surprise, then, when the Lord speaks to him in a dream, ordering him to "withdraw from the world. To set out on pilgrimage with two companions, find this island, and found a monastic retreat"

The Abbot is a bit puzzled at just whom the Lord has instructed him to take along: instead of a dozen strong, seasoned men of middle years, he will take only the old lyre player, Cormac with his dented head, and the young red-haired piper, Trian; one practical, one a bit of a dreamer.

Within days they are sailing down the Sionan and out to sea, in search of their deserted island. Indeed by sail and oar, their craft arrives at a pair of skelligs, both inhospitable except to many species of sea birds, the larger deemed by the Prior as their destination. Their meagre supplies are carried to the tiny habitable patch, and a source of water located. Only a single tree, a stunted rowan, adorns this barren place.



Artt insists they do not overload their little boat with unnecessary equipment and provisions, ensuring that, within weeks they run short of supplies and need to improvise for food, fuel, quills and candles. This requires them to be resourceful, although Artt declares that God always provides (inspiration, perhaps? serendipity?) for his devotees.

Trian is filled with wonder as "Swallows wheel and cavort overhead in shrill numbers, the odd little brown flyer dipping low enough to beak an insect off the water between one wingbeat and the next. Now the whole mass forms a spiralling, swirling cloud, speckling then darkening into a winged shape that smears like ink, rips and dissolves again. So many! What can drive them to flock in such urgent numbers, to form one great bird shape of their countless pointed bodies?"

The young monk's love of nature means that he is disturbed by the amount of bird killing he is required to do to provide food, then fuel and eventually light. He is often hungry. And he misses playing his pipe. Cormac's pragmatism sees him frustrated every time a suggestion for a useful construction is overridden. Their Prior may be learned, but seems naïve about survival, and spends long hours in silent meditation.

Having vowed obedience to their Prior, Cormac and Trian shelve their doubts about some of Artt's decisions. When he insists that a stone cross, an altar, a chapel and the copying of religious texts take precedence over food and shelter, one might wonder if his priorities are skewed by his godliness: is the man devoted, mad or a bit of both?

Privation and suffering can be offered up to God, but winter approaches and the birds are departing: can the trio survive?

The triple narrative provides three very different perspectives on the challenges the men face and their thoughts reveals their very human flaws: even holy men can be plagued by vanity and pride, anger and guilt, cruelty, rigid self belief, lack of charity, and rejection of criticism. And doubt, plenty of doubt.

Donoghue's extensive research into life in the seventh Century is apparent on every page: fascinating details like portable fire, a river vessel, crafting equipment and constructing stone buildings are subtly woven into the narrative. She conveys her era and setting with exquisite descriptive prose. Her imagined establishing of Skellig Michael is brilliant.

This unbiased review is from an uncorrected proof copy provided by NetGalley and Pan Macmillan Picador.

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Details

Bookseller
Inklings & Yarnspinners GB (GB)
Bookseller's Inventory #
IYC132831
Title
Haven (SIGNED)
Author
Donoghue, Emma
Format/Binding
H/b
Book Condition
New Fine, as new, signed on special half-title
Quantity Available
1
Edition
1st
ISBN 10
152909111X
ISBN 13
9781529091113
Publisher
Picador
Place of Publication
London
Date Published
2022
Pages
257
Size
8vo (230 x 150 / 9"" x 6"")
Keywords
1st, fiction, Donoghue, signed, historical fiction
Bookseller catalogs
2nd-hand books;
X weight
0.39 g

Terms of Sale

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About the Seller

Inklings & Yarnspinners

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2021
Maidenhead, Berkshire

About Inklings & Yarnspinners

INKLINGS & YARNSPINNERSA new online bookshop forFIRST & SIGNED EDITIONS, RARE BOOKSA particular focus on:- The Oxford Inklings with their Friends & Influences (C.S. Lewis, Tolkien, Barfield, Williams, Chesterton, Macdonald, Sayers, etc)- Great 20th Century Novelists (e.g. Graham Greene & John le Carré; Anthony Powell & Evelyn Waugh; P. D. James etc)- Great 20th Century Poets (e.g. T. S. Eliot, John Masefield, Walter de la Mare, Seamus Heaney, Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, Stevie Smith, W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender, Dylan Thomas, etc)- Christian Theology (e.g. from library sales)

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