Book Review – So Late in the Day by Claire Keegan #NOVNOV24

About the Book

Boo cover of So Late in the Day by Claire Keegan

After an uneventful Friday at the Dublin office, Cathal faces into the long weekend and takes the bus home. There, his mind agitates over a woman named Sabine with whom he could have spent his life, had he acted differently. All evening, with only the television and a bottle of champagne for company, thoughts of this woman and others intrude – and the true significance of this particular date is revealed.

Format: Hardback (64 pages) Publisher: Faber & Faber
Publication date: 31st August 2023 Genre: Contemporary Fiction

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My Review

I included this book on my list for Novellas in November, an annual reading event hosted jointly by Cathy at 746 Books and Rebecca at Bookish Beck. To be honest, you could argue So Late in the Day is more a short story than a novella but I’m sure I’ll be forgiven.

Cathal is having a bad day. The sort of day where you close down a spreadsheet you’ve been working on without remembering to save it first. Where you go home to an empty house, drop your clothes on the floor, prepare a meal of the first thing that comes to hand in the freezer, and drink alcohol straight from the bottle. After all, there’s no-one else there to see.

Cathal starts off as a sympathetic figure but, bit by bit, as we learn more about his past, especially about his relationship with a woman called Sabine, a different view emerges. It starts with small things like him being miffed at the cost of the cherries she buys to make a tart, his annoyance at how many dishes she uses when she cooks a meal, and the fact she insists on having a takeaway delivered even though he could save four euros by going to collect it. Okay, so he’s careful with money – what’s wrong with that? But when he quibbles about the cost of something – an unnecessary cost, as far as he’s concerned – despite it having special significance, it sets alarm bells ringing.

When Sabine moves in – at his suggestion – he is annoyed at the amount of stuff she brings with her, how she moves some of his possessions to make room for her own ‘as though the house now belonged to her also’. Annoyance turns to infuriation. ‘That was part of the trouble: the fact that she would not listen, and wanted to do a good half of things her own way’. And now we’re starting to see a distinctly unpleasant side to Cathal’s character. A chilling episode from his childhood shows the roots of this attitude, how ingrained it has become in the way he views women.

Even before we learn what should have happened that day but didn’t, and the void in his life it’s left, my sympathy for him was gone.

Claire Keegan wields her pen with the precision of a surgeon. As in Small Things Like These, she manages to convey so much in so few words.


About the Author

Author Claire Keegan

Claire Keegan’s stories are translated into more than thirty-five langiages. Antarctica won the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. Walk the Blue Fields won the Edge Hill Prize for the finest collection of stories published in the British Isles. Foster won the Davy Byrnes Award and in 2020 was chosen by The Times as one of the top fifty works of fiction to be published in the twenty-first century. Small Things Like These was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and the Rathbones Folio Prize, awarded for the best work of literature, regardless of form, to be published in the English language. It won the Kerry Group Irish Novel of the Year Award, the Ambassador’s Award and the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction.

Deeds of Darkness: Stories by William Burton McCormick @WBMCAuthor

About the Book

Book cover of Deeds of Darkness:Stories by William Burton McCormick

A collection of twenty-four globetrotting stories of suspense, mystery, crime, espionage, horror, and historical genres, Deeds of Darkness takes readers from war-torn Eastern Europe to gangster America and deep below the frozen seas of the Arctic Ocean.

From modern tales of crime to World War II espionage to ghost stories in shadowy Odessa and murder in Ancient Rome, every flavour of suspense and adventure awaits within.

Format: ebook (594 pages) Publisher: Level Best Books
Publication date: 5th November 2024 Genre: Short Stories, Mystery

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A Glimpse of Deeds of Darkness

Deeds of Darkness is a short story collection by award-winning author William Burton McCormick. It contains twenty-four stories some of which have appeared in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine and Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, or been published as novellas. The latter includes House of Tigers which I read and reviewed in 2022. Some of the stories introduce characters who will appear in other stories. An example is sisters Tasia and Eleni who feature in another of the author’s books I’ve read, A Stranger From the Storm set in Odessa in 1900.

Unfortunately I haven’t been able to find a gap in my reading schedule to read the whole collection but I’ve dipped into a few of the stories to give you a flavour of what awaits. All the stories in the collection were written whilst the author was living in Ukraine or Latvia, just two of the many countries in which he has dwelt, and many are set there. Sadly, as he observes in his introduction, ‘Some of the places I wrote in are now gone, wiped from the Earth by Russian aggression’.

  1. A finalist for an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America, ‘Locked In’ is the chilling story of a man who accidentally locks himself in the cellar of a house he is renting. His initial relief at attracting the attention of a passer-by turns out to be shortlived… and misplaced.
  2. The author and I share an admiration for the ghost stories of M. R. James and ‘The Antiquary’s Wife’ is the author’s homage to him. (You can read brief excerpts from my favourite M. R. James stories here.) Readers familiar with James’s stories will feel right at home, if that’s quite the right way to describe such an unsettling, chilling tale. An ancient relic, an excess of curiosity and an object that has a life of its own are just some of the elements.
  3. Set in Rome in AD55, ‘Pompo’s Disguise’ introduces us to tavern thief Quintus who makes an unfortunate choice of victim to steal from.

If you need any further persuasion, heed the words of bestselling crime author Peter James who says of William Burton McCormick, “This guy has a wonderfully twisted mind! Buckle up for a scary ride.”


About the Author

Author William Burton McCormick

William Burton McCormick is an Edgar, Thriller, Shamus, Derringer, Sliver Falchion and Claymore awards finalist whose fiction regularly appears in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, The Saturday Evening Post, Black Mask, Mystery Weekly and elsewhere. He is a graduate of Brown University, earned an MA in Novel Writing from the University of Manchester and was elected a Hawthornden Writing Fellow in Scotland. 

He is a member of Mystery Writers of America, the Crime Writers Association, International Thriller Writers and the Short Mystery Fiction Society. His historical novel of the Baltic Republics, Lenin’s Harem, was the first work of fiction added to the permanent library at the Latvian War Museum in Rīga. A native of Nevada, William has lived in seven countries including Latvia, Russia, the United Kingdom and Ukraine for writing purposes.

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