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The 2010 Award

 

The Truth Commissioner

The Truth Commissioner

by David Park

 

 

Nominated by:

  • Limerick City Library, Ireland
  • Cape Breton Regional Library, Sydney, Canada

Publisher of Nominated Edition:


Bloomsbury Publishing, UK

 

the complete A-Z listing of nominated authors
ABOUT THE BOOK

Henry Stanfield, the newly arrived Truth Commissioner, is troubled by his estrangement from his daughter, and struggling with the consequences of his infidelities. Francis Gilroy, veteran Republican and recently appointed government minister, risks losing what feels tantalisingly close to his grasp. In America, Danny and his partner plan for the arrival of their first child, happily oblivious to what is about to pull him back to Belfast and rupture the life they have started together. Retired detective James Fenton, on his way to an orphanage in Romania with a van full of supplies, will soon be forced to confront what he has come to think of as his betrayal, years before, of a teenage boy.

In a society trying to heal the scars of the past with the salve of truth and reconciliation, four men’s lives become linked in a way they could never have imagined. In a community where truth is often tribal and partial, the secret they share threatens to destroy what they have each built in the present. David Park pieces together these individual stories to create a powerful tale that transcends both time and place. Moving, insightful and utterly involving, The Truth Commissioner is an important novel from one of Ireland’s greatest writers

(From Publisher).


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David Park has written six books, most recently the hugely acclaimed Swallowing the Sun. He was the winner of the Authors' Club First Novel Award, the Bass Ireland Arts Award for Literature and a twice winner of the University of Ulster's McCrea Literary Award. In June 2008 he was awarded the American Ireland Fund Literary Award for his contribution to Irish literature.
He lives in County Down, Northern Ireland with his wife and two children.

LIBRARIANS' COMMENTS

It is a beautifully written story of post – Good Friday sides of the political divide while the central storyline is about one of the disappeared, the book focuses more with how the four main characters deal with the consequences of the past action’s other than the politics.

 

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