Land
From the no. 1 bestselling author of Hamnet, a multigenerational epic of loss, hope and reunion
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected 2 Jun 2026
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- 12,99 €
Publisher Description
'You will never understand how the land remembers, how deep the roots grow'
A spellbinding story of separation, longing, recovery and survival as a family makes a new home in the aftermath of tragedy.
'A heart-bursting story of resilience and love' Louise Kennedy
'Haunting and elemental' Ferdia Lennon
'Darkly magical. A brilliant and powerful novel' Alice Winn
'This beautiful book swallowed me whole' Charlotte McConaghy
'A work of towering imagination and empathy' Roisín O'Donnell
'As visceral as a novel can get' Yael van der Wouden
On a windswept peninsula stretching out into the Atlantic, Tomás and his reluctant son, Liam, are working for the great Ordnance Survey project to map the whole of Ireland. The year is 1865, and in a country not long since ravaged and emptied by the Great Hunger, the task is not an easy one. Tomás, however, is determined that his maps will be a record of the disaster.
The British soldiers in charge are due to arrive any day, expecting the work to be completed, but Tomás is sent off course by an unsettling encounter in a copse. His life, and those of his family, will never be the same again. Liam is terrified by the sudden change in his taciturn father. What was it that caused such cracks to open in Tomás and how is Liam, aged only ten, going to finish the mapping, and get them both home?
Land is a story of buried treasure, overlapping lives, ancient woodland, persistent ghosts, a particularly loyal dog, and how, when it comes to both land and history, nothing ever goes away.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
O'Farrell (Hamnet) paints a devastating yet tender portrait of Irish history through the story of a Dublin family's relocation to a western peninsula. In 1865, with resentment at British rule growing in Ireland, skilled draftsman Tomás travels with his 10-year-old son, Liam, from Dublin to the secluded outpost. His assignment is to map the area and to establish new English place-names to substitute for traditional Irish ones. But after Tomás discovers a mystical and secluded spring, he's flooded by a newfound sense of purpose, which he attempts to explain to Liam: "My point is, my point is, my point is... that there needs to be a map of how this land really is.... And to do so would be an act of honour. Honour and resistance." Liam is alarmed and confused by his taciturn father's sudden torrent of words, and a local priest worries Tomás has been possessed by the devil. "That well... is a heathen place, pagan and godless," the priest tells Tomás. Forever changed, Tomás moves his family to the peninsula, where older daughter Enda bristles at their isolation while Liam willfully turns toward God and away from his father. Meanwhile, younger daughter Rose longs for stability, and youngest child Eugene silently nurtures his own singular relationship to the land and its history. Mellifluous digressions spotlight the peninsula's earlier settlers, such as a girl named Brith who walks in sealskin shoes on the same ground as Tomás and his family. It's a stunning and gorgeous epic.