After the Titanic: A Life of Derek Mahon
Book
Over forty-five years have elapsed since Derek Mahon announced his arrival at the forefront of Irish...
Building the Titanic
Book
Conceived in 1907, the "Titanic" was two years in design and 37 months in construction at the great...
Street Shuffle Europe
Travel and Reference
App
Street Shuffle Europe uses Google Street View technology to help you discover Europe. Simply tap the...
Travelling in a strange land
Book
Set in a frozen winter landscape, the new novel from the prize-winning, acclaimed author David Park...
Rock Paper Scissors
Book
Soon to be a Netflix series from the producer of The Crown The phenomenal new thriller from the...
The Magi Menagerie (The Magi Menagerie #1)
Book
Some stars aren't meant to be followed... For seventeen years, Ezra Newport and his parents were...
Young Adult New Adult Fantasy Historical
UK Newspapers | Wales Newspapers| Scotland Newspapers |Northern Ireland Newspapers
News and Business
App
Finally, you will put your finger on the pulse of what’s happening in the UK and abroad, the same...
Adam Colclough (3 KP) rated Harry's Game in Books
Mar 6, 2018
For the most part thrillers are the literary equivalent of Danish pastry, enjoyable but not made to last. A few, and ‘Harry’s Game’ is one, are more substantial fare, food for the mind that may give you indigestion.
On one level it is a book in the tradition established by Frederick Forsythe, fiction played out as fact allowing the author to draw on his journalistic background. Seymour goes beyond this by creating characters who aren’t simply stock heroes and villains. Instead they are human beings engaged in a struggle that is squalid and futile rather than heroic and purposeful.
This combines to give a grimly believable picture of daily life in Northern Ireland at a time when a single word or action out of place could have deadly consequences. He also writes well about the machinations behind the scenes on both sides, with the British political and military establishment struggling to fight an undeclared war they don’t understand; and the IRA high command masking the brutality of their actions behind misty eyed romanticism.
Brutal, believable and still relevant more than forty years after it was first published this is a novel that is very much worth reading, even if doing so can be unsettling.
Glasgow: The Real Mean City: True Crime and Punishment in the Second City of Empire
Book
There cannot be many cities where crime could mean anything from stealing a ship to singing a...
Hugh de Lacy, First Earl of Ulster: Rising and Falling in Angevin Ireland
Book
This book charts the striking rise, fall and restoration of the first earl of Ulster, Hugh II de...