Book description
17 June 1959. It's Election Day in Ireland, but Ann Strong has
other things on her mind. Terrified of miscarriage after losing her
last baby, she is admitted into the labour ward of St Gerard's
hospital. Outside, her husband Fonsie waits anxiously with four other
fathers-to-be. Men of their time, they scarcely speak to each other.
But their children, born together on this day, will grow up in a
changed world that questions and connects.
31 December 1961.
Gavin Bloom is floor manager on the first ever live television
broadcast in Ireland. It's a prestigious job, but a part of him feels
a fraud. Though talking is what he does best, there is one thing Gavin
never speaks about -- not even to himself.
10 October 1964. Dom,
a brash, clever, reckless politician with a beautiful wife, sees
himself as an Irish JFK. When he is prosecuted for drunk driving, his
career seems to be over. But then he and the policeman who has charged
him come face to face in court. They don't exchange a word, but
something happens between them that changes Dom's life and propels him
to help change the life of every child in the country.
Unspoken
charts the interlocking stories of a group of unforgettable characters
through the 1960s, a tumultuous decade during which Ireland threw off
some ancient shackles yet assumed other, more modern ones. Alive with
character and understated ambition, it is both a magnificent work of
literature and an absolute delight.
Gerard Stembridge is the author of two novels, COUNTING DOWN and
ACCORDING TO LUKE (both Penguin Ireland). He has also written and
directed film and television. Credits include ABOUT ADAM with Kate
Hudson, the screenplay for ORDINARY DECENT CRIMINAL (starring Kevin
Spacey, Colin Farrell and Linda Fiorentino), and he co-wrote NORA (a
film about James Joyce and Nora Barnacle, starring Ewan McGregor and
Susan Lynch). He was the co-creator, with Dermot Morgan, of SCRAP
SATURDAY.