An Evening of Ravelling with Estelle Birdy at Roe River Books

An Evening of Ravelling with Estelle Birdy at Roe River Books

Estelle Birdy will be in Roe River Books for the Dundalk launch of her debut novel Ravelling.

By Country Gent/Culture Club presents

Date and time

Fri, 14 Jun 2024 19:00 - 21:00 GMT+1

Location

Roe River Books

60 Clanbrassil Street A91 HR65 Dundalk Ireland

About this event

  • 2 hours

Culture Club and Roe River Books are delighted to welcome Estelle Birdy to Roe River Bookshop to discuss her debut novel ‘Ravelling’ which is an Irish Times Most Anticipated Book of 2024. Described by Donal Ryan as ‘a glorious novel, tough and hilarious and full of heart’.


ESTELLE BIRDY is a writer, poet, book critic and yoga teacher who lives with her family in Dublin. Her debut novel Ravelling was a winner of the Irish Writers Centre Novel Fair in 2020. Her work is supported by the Arts Council of Ireland.


ABOUT THE BOOK

SET IN DUBLIN’S LIBERTIES, Estelle Birdy’s explosively original debut Ravelling channels the energies and agonies of young men let loose in the city, their city, navigating the tumultuous trajectory of youth and young manhood, where they balance their hopes with the harsh realities of their present.

Hurtling between friendships, feuds, drug-deals, family and brushes with the law, this is modern Dublin as never before portrayed. Ravelling follows Deano, a weed-smoking hurling star, living with his aunt in an about-to-be-demolished flat; Hamza, a Pakistani Muslim atheist and precocious academic, who sells his ADHD drugs to the kids in a private school; Oisín, empathetic and iron-willed, who has begun to see his dead brother at the end of his bed; Congolese nature lover, Benit, who just wants to relax and hurl with the lads; Karl, a maybe-gay fashionista, dreaming of something better while immersing himself in his art.

Bound by friendship, place and the memories of those who’ve died too soon, these young men grapple with race, class, sex, parties, poverty, violence and Garda harassment, all while wondering what it means to be a man in twenty-first century Ireland.

Ravelling’s diverse, captivating cast of characters, rendered in pin-sharp dialogue reminiscent of Roddy Doyle, leaves the reader with an immersive sense of multi-cultural Ireland. Fast-paced, funny and eye-popping, it descends from Trainspotting, White Teeth and Milkman in its portrayal of urban life in the twenty-first century. Ravelling has been optioned by Sleeper Films for a major TV series.

Praise for Ravelling

‘Written in fluent, truthful prose, with humour and empathy abounding.’ SEBASTIAN BARRY

Ravelling masterfully evokes the fragility and beauty of human relationships. It’s funny, bold and bursting with love. There’s no moral here, just an ode to community, a burning sense of youth and a plea for a society pushed to the margins.’ KARL GEARY

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