Big Mouth, by Blanaid McKinney (Phoenix, £6.99 in UK)

Blanaid McKinney's first book, a collection of 11 much-lauded stories which came out last year, is already in its second edition…

Blanaid McKinney's first book, a collection of 11 much-lauded stories which came out last year, is already in its second edition. That has to be interesting news for those to whom the short story genre has traditionally represented a literary cul-de-sac. Big Mouth is a book that delivers, Big Time. Each story has the potency and emotional range of a novella; many of them lodging in the memory, uncomfortable as shrapnel. These are strange, tough, and beautifully-crafted stories, brimming with imagination. If a style can have a gender, McKinney's distinctive style is masculine. "The Klondyker and the Silver Darlings", a story of love and loss set in a fishing community, is woven with the intricacy of a fishing net. "About Letters About Love, Mostly" is a cool study of paranoia. In "Transmission" a man tries to destroy terrible memories in destroying the car that killed his wife. The title story, "Big Mouth", is a chilling meditation on language, exile and violence. McKinney's own use of language and image is as honed as a poet's, and the extensive background research she must have done for this book is lightly worn, and carefully displayed. Fine stuff.

Rosita Boland

Rosita Boland

Rosita Boland is Senior Features Writer with The Irish Times. She was named NewsBrands Ireland Journalist of the Year for 2018