The Speckled People: Large type edition

By Hugo Hamilton

A deeply moving memoir about a young boy growing up in Dublin and his family’s homesickness for a country they can call their own.

The childhood world of Hugo Hamilton is a confused place: His father, a brutal Irish nationalist, demands his children speak Gaelic at home whilst his mother, a softly spoken German emigrant who escaped Nazi Germany at the beginning of the war, encourages them to speak German. All Hugo wants to do is speak English. English is, after all, what the other children in Dublin speak. English is what they use when they hunt down Hugo (or ‘Eichmann’ as they dub him) in the streets of Dublin, and English is what they use when they bring him to trial and execute him at a mock seaside court. Out of this fear and confusion Hugo tries to build a balanced view of the world, to turn the twisted logic of what he is told into truth. It is a journey that ends in liberation but not before this little boy has uncovered the dark and long-buried secrets that lie at the bottom of his parents’ wardrobe.

In one of the finest books to have emerged from Ireland since Patrick McCabe’s THE BUTCHER BOY and Seamus Deane’s READING IN THE DARK, acclaimed novelist Hugo Hamilton has finally written his own story.

Format: Paperback
Release Date: 03 Apr 2006
Pages: 468
ISBN: 978-0-00-723546-9
Price: £18.99 (Export Price) , £18.99, €None
Detailed Edition: Large type edition
Hugo Hamilton was born and grew up in Dublin. He is the author of five highly acclaimed novels: \'Surrogate City\', \'The Last Shot\' and \'The Love Test\' (Faber); \'Headbanger\' and \'Sad Bastard\' (Secker); and one collection of short stories. He has worked as a writer-in-residence at many leading universities, including most recently at Trinity College, Dublin. He has just returned to Ireland from a DAAD scholarship in Berlin.

”'This is the most gripping book I've read in ages. And it's beautifully written: what could have been safe memories are made new-lived and real in this fascinating, disturbing and often very funny memoir.'” - Roddy Doyle'The Speckled People is poetic in its language and construction, lyrical in so many of its descriptions. There is a story full of several different kinds of passion with a real tragedy at its heart. The pain is all there, but so is its antidote.’Margaret Forster'Donner und Blitzen! What the Jaysus! A memoir of warmth and wisdom. And at last a good - if flawed - Irish father. A beautiful German mother. And not too much rain. It is tender and profound and, best of all, tells the truth. I loved it.'Patrick McCabe'A fine and timely book from an exquisitely gifted writer, this is beautiful, subtle, unflashy, perfectly realised and quite extraordinarily powerful.'Joseph O'Connor