Colin Barrett was born in 1982 and grew up in County Mayo. His stories have been published in The Stinging Fly, Granta, Harper's and the New Yorker. His first book, the short story collection Young Skins, won the 2014 Guardian First Book Award, the 2014 Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award and the 2014 Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. In 2018 Barrett was selected as the Rolex Arts Initiative protege in Literature. His debut novel is forthcoming from Jonathan Cape.
A mesmerisingly powerful book, full of the strangeness and beauty
of life. I've learned so much from Colin Barrett's work as a reader
and writer...these stories are his best yet
*Sally Rooney*
Full of humour and small-town Irish colour... His [Barrett's]
second collection confirms him as one of the very best short-story
writers in the business
*New Statesman, *Books of the Year**
A masterwork - by turns hilarious and heartbreaking... What fierce,
tender stories. Totally unforgettable
*Brandon Taylor*
The stories in Homesickness are crafted with skill and flair. Colin
Barrett anchors the work with emotional accuracy and careful
delineation of character, and then, using metaphors and beautifully
made sentences, he lets his narrative soar
*Colm Toibin*
Lyrical and tough and smart... His stories are set in a familiar
emotional landscape, but they give us endings that are new
*Anne Enright*
Addictive, stylish and violently funny stories, with riches on
every page - an outstanding collection
*Kevin Barry*
Shot through with dark humor, pitch-perfect dialogue and a
signature freshness that makes life palpable on the
page...Homesickness is graced with an original, lingering
beauty
*Stuart Dybek, New York Times Book Review*
Even though we rarely enter their internal worlds, Colin Barrett
conjures interiority through his linguistic precision and attention
to external detail, so that each story lingers in the mind and
haunts its successors
*Times Literary Supplement*
Superb...[T]here is an utterness to his attention, a devotion to
the lives of his characters, that shifts the work into some more
lasting place. Barrett is already one of the leading writers of the
Irish short story, which is to braggingly say, one of the leading
writers of the short story anywhere. He means every word and
regrets every word. He just kills it
*Guardian*
Something struck me as I read these beautifully crafted,
desperately sad, but often very funny stories: there is now a
branch of English called the Colin Barrett
*Roddy Doyle*
This is a beautiful and moving collection, from one of the best
story writers today.
*Financial Times*
Homesickness is an adroit, wry set of stories by an author who has
an eye for the quirks of human nature.
*Independent*
With a sharp eye for the absurd in the ordinary, Barrett's stories
impart gritty and touching realisations about life as it really is.
Edgy, sharp and utterly original, Homesickness is an utterly
compelling collection and Barrett is meticulous
*Elaine Feeney*
Colin Barrett is a young man in the town of the short story, but
it's fair to say he has the run of the place
*Jon McGregor*
Homesickness is another finely crafted collection... Crisply told,
fond of an eye-catching flourish... the stories draw energy from
the rhythms of west of Ireland small talk, added to Barrett's eye
for striking detail...The scenarios are richly layered, with punchy
payoffs.
*Observer*
Strange and haunting fiction. You could open Homesickness at any
page and find sentences of vim and elegance, ringing dialogue...and
similes to savour.
*i*
Homesickness presents us with a set of characters forever losing
things: other people's dogs, girlfriends, the will to live. But in
the course of these stories they find things, too: courage; a
crumpled sort of wisdom; the will to live. Between the comedy, and
the pure thrill of the language, there's a lot of sorrow and mental
illness here, but the afterglow of the stories, which settle and
stay with you, is one of moving regard for the flaws and wants we
battle, flee, and bargain with every day of our lives
*Chris Power*
Vivid, punchy... Barrett delineates with verve the ways his
characters struggle.
*Literary Review*
Worth the wait... few do it as well as Colin Barrett.
*New Statesman*
Barrett's... brilliant second collection confirms him as one of the
very best short-story writers in the business.
*New Statesman, *The Best Books of 2022 so far**
Barrett's stories are, without exception, beautifully written, full
of arresting imagery.
*Booklist (starred review)*
Bittersweet and chiseled...From gritty realism to oddball noir,
this assured collection demonstrates the talent of a distinctive
writer.
*Publishers Weekly*
Richly descriptive...This sharply observant collection resists
pigeonholing its recalcitrant characters.
*Kirkus Review*
A masterwork-by turns hilarious and heart-breaking, these stories
shimmer. No story writer at work today thrills me more than Colin
Barrett, whose characters feel immediately so familiar and true in
their capacity to maim and love. What fierce, tender stories.
Totally unforgettable.
*Brandon Taylor*
Funny, devastating, slow-burning, these understated tales of
misfits and misadventures in smalltown Ireland are written with a
casual grace.
*Guardian, *Summer Reads of 2022**
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