
The Good People
Hannah Kent(Author)
Picador (Publisher)
Published on 7. September 2017
Book
Paperback/Softback
400 pages
978-1-4472-3336-7 (ISBN)
Description
Shortlisted for the Walter Scott Prize.
Based on true events, The Good People is Hannah Kent's engrossing novel about superstition and devoted love.
'An even better novel than Burial Rites - a starkly realised tale of love, grief and misconceived beliefs - Sunday Times
Ireland, 1825.
Nora, bereft after the sudden death of her husband, finds herself alone and caring for her young grandson Micheal, who cannot speak or walk. What happened to the healthy, happy grandson she met when her daughter was still alive?
Mary arrives in the valley to help Nora just as the whispers are spreading: stories of unexplained misfortunes, of illnesses, and rumours that Micheal is a changeling child who is bringing bad luck to the valley.
Nance has lived in the valley all of her life. She is a healer who knows how to use the plants and berries of the woodland; she understands the magic in the old ways. And she might be able to help Micheal . . .
As these three women are drawn together in the hope of restoring Micheal, their world of folklore and belief, of ritual and stories, tightens around them. It will lead them down a dangerous path, and force them to question everything they have ever known.
'An imaginative tour de force . . . exquisite' - Daily Mail
Based on true events, The Good People is Hannah Kent's engrossing novel about superstition and devoted love.
'An even better novel than Burial Rites - a starkly realised tale of love, grief and misconceived beliefs - Sunday Times
Ireland, 1825.
Nora, bereft after the sudden death of her husband, finds herself alone and caring for her young grandson Micheal, who cannot speak or walk. What happened to the healthy, happy grandson she met when her daughter was still alive?
Mary arrives in the valley to help Nora just as the whispers are spreading: stories of unexplained misfortunes, of illnesses, and rumours that Micheal is a changeling child who is bringing bad luck to the valley.
Nance has lived in the valley all of her life. She is a healer who knows how to use the plants and berries of the woodland; she understands the magic in the old ways. And she might be able to help Micheal . . .
As these three women are drawn together in the hope of restoring Micheal, their world of folklore and belief, of ritual and stories, tightens around them. It will lead them down a dangerous path, and force them to question everything they have ever known.
'An imaginative tour de force . . . exquisite' - Daily Mail
Reviews / Votes
Exceptional . . . The Good People is an even better novel than Burial Rites - a starkly realised tale of love, grief and misconceived beliefs * Sunday Times * Lyrical and unsettling . . . A literary novel with the pace and tension of a thriller . . . I am in awe of Kent's gifts as a storyteller. -- Paula Hawkins, bestselling author of <i>The Girl on the Train</i> An imaginative tour-de-force that recreates a way of perceiving the world with extraordinary vividness . . . With its exquisite prose, this harrowing, haunting narrative of love and suffering is sure to be a prize-winner * Daily Mail * Kent has a terrific feel for the language of her setting. The prose is richly textured with evocative vocabulary . . . A serious and compelling novel about how those in desperate circumstances cling to ritual as a bulwark against their own powerlessness -- Graeme Macrae Burnet * Guardian * Hannah Kent's second novel is a thorough study of the faiths and rituals of a rural community, as well as a poignant portrayal of grief * Financial Times * The Good People lies somewhere between Andrew Michael Hurley's gothic The Loney and Emma Donoghue's The Wonder . . . an absorbing and imaginative novel about superstition and the old ways * The Times * A thoroughly engrossing entree into the macabre nature of a vanished society, its virtues and its follies and its lethal impulses . . . utterly unexpected -- Thomas Keneally, Booker Prize-author of <i>Schindler's Ark</i> Beautiful . . . the setting and the characters drew me in immediately and kept me completely absorbed -- Claire King, author of <i>The Night Rainbow</i> An immersive, startlingly lyrical portrait of a time when the borders between logic and superstition were dangerously porous . . . thrillingly alive * Metro * Remarkable . . . Kent displays an uncanny ability to immerse herself in an unfamiliar landscape and to give that landscape a life - a voice - that is utterly convincing . . . a haunting novel, shrewdly conceived and beautifully written * The Australian * A sensitively drawn tale of love, grief, and terrible loss * The Age * The Good People is a sensitively drawn tale of love, grief, and terrible loss, set in a tiny Irish village in the early 19th century . . . filled with descriptions of ritual and rhythm * Canberra Times *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Pan Macmillan
Target group
Interest Age: From 18 years
Product notice
Paperback (UK-B)
Dimensions
Height: 195 mm
Width: 128 mm
Thickness: 30 mm
Weight
290 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4472-3336-7 (9781447233367)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Hannah Kent
The Good People
A thrilling story of love, folklore and superstition from the author of Burial Rites
E-Book
02/2017
Picador
€15.99
Available for download
Person
Hannah Kent was born in Adelaide in 1985. Her first novel, Burial Rites, has been translated into nearly thirty languages and was shortlisted for the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction (formerly the Orange Prize), the Guardian First Book Award and the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award. In Australia it won the ABIA Literary Fiction Book of the Year, the Indie Awards Debut Fiction Book of the Year and the Victorian Premier's People's Choice Award, amongst others. Hannah is also the co-founder and publishing director of Australian literary journal Kill Your Darlings. The Good People is her second novel.