A powerful novel of toxic masculinity and life in Belfast with the legacy of the Troubles for readers of Claire Keegan and Colin Walsh
A powerful novel of toxic masculinity and life in Belfast with the legacy of the Troubles for readers of Claire Keegan and Colin Walsh
'Visceral and unpredictable, Silverback is doing what novels do best . . . Told with real intelligence, skill and compassion, this is a seriously impressive novel' COLIN WALSH
'Silverback is both a murder mystery and a knottily impressive portrait of a peculiarly Ulster form of masculinity' SUNDAY TELEGRAPH'Highly original . . . Many novels about The Troubles depict the horrors that take place on the street. This one, set at an intriguing remove, exposes the more ambiguous horrors gnawing within' DAILY MAILIn a Belfast courtroom Robert Rusting is on trial for the murder of his father, a former loyalist hardman. On the jury is James Fechner, a middle-aged surgeon in search of meaning in the hushed rooms of justice, inexplicably drawn to the younger man before him. After trial, Fechner can't quite return to life before those days in court. In dingy pubs and rowdy boxing halls Fechner inserts himself into Rusting's world in another guise, following a compulsive pull to an aggressive, unapologetic way of life. So begins a close friendship, a relationship in which a battle for control is tacit but unspoken - and explosive.Silverback is a powerful portrayal of the complications of masculinity and of the line between fragility and violence told in an unforgettable voice.Visceral and unpredictable, Silverback is a novel doing what novels do best: it plunges beneath catch-all labels like 'toxic masculinity' to explore the complicated and mercurial humanity of flesh and blood human beings. Harrison's characters are fathers and sons, husbands and friends, mentors and ingenues, all from different walks of life, all vulnerable in their power, and all so starved for connection that tenderness and violence have become indistinguishable. Told with real intelligence, skill and compassion, this is a seriously impressive novel -- Colin Walsh
Silverback is both a murder mystery and a knottily impressive portrait of a peculiarly Ulster form of masculinity -- John Self Sunday Telegraph
Highly original . . . Many novels about The Troubles depict the horrors that take place on the street. This one, set at an intriguing remove, exposes the more ambiguous horrors gnawing within Daily Mail
a dark and unnerving tale of heartless fathers and damaged sons told in a spare, clinical tone . . . Harrison writes with great conviction, his story moving forward with tragic insight -- John Boyne Irish Times
Phil Harrison is a writer and filmmaker living in Belfast. His first feature film, The Good Man, was released in 2012. His earlier short, Even Gods, won the short film award at the Belfast, Galway, and Cork Film Festivals in 2011, and was short-listed for the best short script at the 2012 Irish Screenwriting Awards. His debut novel, The First Day, also set in Belfast, was published in 2017.
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