
The Midnight Choir
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Narrated by:
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John Cormack
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By:
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Gene Kerrigan
About this listen
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Critic reviews
"This is the type of book you pass on to someone you like, and say 'Read this.'." (The Post)
"He has something of James Joyce's ability in conjuring up a vivid Dublin: but this modern city is very different from the one Leopald Bloom wandered through." (The Independent)
"He has something of James Joyce's ability in conjuring up a vivid Dublin: but this modern city is very different from the one Leopald Bloom wandered through." (The Independent)
In Galway a man is prevented from jumping to his death by a young Garda who must then try to find out how the man came to be covered in blood that isn't his own. Meanwhile in Dublin a young mother tries to mug an American tourist at a cash machine while a seasoned criminal plans a jewellery robbery, hard man Lar MacKendrick gets back into the swing of killing people after the death of his brother and a young woman reports a date rape to Police.
At the centre of all of this is Detective Inspector Harry Synott who proceeds through these investigations as well as experiencing a series of flashbacks of incidents in his career which help explain why he's not everyone's favourite copper. Harry is a brilliantly complex character, struggling continuously with the question of whether justice can be served by the law. But if Harry's story isn't enough to keep you glued there are several other equally compelling personal stories that will, if you're at all like me, have you shifting from anger to sadness and back again at a rapid pace.
The story dealt with some uniquely Irish themes as well as the broader issues that are shared in big cities the world over so having the book narrated in John Cormack's gentle Irish accent was a definite treat as it helped me get absorbed in the world that Kerrigan had created even more completely.
A modern Irish epic
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