Paul Lynch parents-Irish novelist, Paul Lynch was born on May 9, 1977, in Limerick in the southwest of Ireland.

Who are Paul Lynch’s parents?

As of the time of filing this report, we have no details about Paul Lynch’s parents’ names at the moment. They are also believed to be also Irish.

Paul Lynch career

Red Sky in Morning, Lynch’s first book, was the focus of a six-publisher auction in London and was well-received both in the United States and in France, where it was a finalist for the Prix du Meilleur Livre Étranger (Best Foreign Book Award).

Paul Lynch novelist photographed near Glencree. Pic. Bryan Meade 18/08/2017

A television documentary concerning the excavation of Duffy’s Cut, a location close to Philadelphia where Irish immigrants from Ulster were found in an unmarked mass grave in the 1830s, served as the inspiration for the book.

The work of a “lapidary young master,” according to NPR’s Alan Cheuse, tackles themes of emigration, racism, and brutality.

The Black Snow, Lynch’s second book, tells the story of an Irish immigrant who returns to his hometown in County Donegal and the tragic events that follow after a byre catches fire.

The book received France’s Prix Libr’à Nous for best foreign novel and was placed on other prize shortlists. Theo Dorgan referred to the book as “a significant achievement” in Sunday Times Ireland.

His third book, Grace (2017), is a picaresque and bildungsroman that takes place in the midst of the Irish Famine and chronicles a young girl’s fight for survival.

The book was shortlisted for numerous honors, including the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, and received the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year award.

In addition to being shortlisted for numerous honors, including the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction, the book was awarded the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year.

The New York Times wrote in a review that Lynch “is a sure-footed tightrope walker…his lush, poetic prose acts as a foil to the reality of the famine in a deliberate and painful way.”

Beyond the Sea (2019), Lynch’s fourth book is an existential story about two castaways on a yacht in the Pacific Ocean, and it was inspired by a factual incident.

Reviewers have drawn comparisons between the novel and the works of Ernest Hemingway, Samuel Beckett, Herman Melville, William Golding, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and Pablo Neruda. It was awarded the Prix Gens de Mers in France in 2022.

Prophet Song, Lynch’s fifth book, has been hailed as “a chilling study of Ireland becoming a fascist state”. When the book was first published, it garnered mixed reviews in both Britain and Ireland, according to the New York Times.

After being called “an impressive novel in stylistic as well as political terms” by The Guardian, Prophet Song won the esteemed Booker Prize for 2023.

Source: www.Ghgossip.com

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