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Overview'An immaculate debut with dirt under its fingernails' Colin Walsh, author of Kala Just so we're clear, she said, I know the rules of confession. What I say cannot be repeated. Not to anyone... When Mack O'Brien left his home in Port Talbot for the seminary as a teenager, he didn't imagine he'd be back a decade later, unordained and still at a loss as to what makes for a moral life. He takes a job as a security guard at the local steelworks and begins an uneasy transition into the world he once rejected. When the men of the steelworks organise an unprecedented strike in protest against job cuts, he sees no reason not to go along with it. The last person Mack expects to see in the local club is Siwan Roderick - the woman who appeared out of the blue at the seminary one day to make a confession and swear him to secrecy. Mack kept his word. But as the day of the strike nears, and as he begins to fully understand what Siwan is planning, Mack is forced to reckon with his loyalty to her and the question of whether an act of violence can ever be justified. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jon DoylePublisher: Atlantic Books Imprint: Atlantic Books Edition: Export/Airside ISBN: 9781805465140ISBN 10: 1805465147 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 02 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsElectric... A wonderful, brilliant piece of work. Just brilliant. This is someone with a voice, with something to say, with a natural talent * Kasim Ali, author of Good Intentions * Jon Doyle is a great new voice - and an important one. His work is real in the very best sense: exactly observed, often funny and unafraid of the greatest themes * Tom Bullough, author of Sarn Helen and Addlands * Gritty and luminous, intelligent and sincere, a radical and transgressive novel in which the profane, the political and the personal are entirely rooted in the sacred. Communion is both tender and confrontational, an immaculate debut with dirt under its fingernails * Colin Walsh, author of Kala * A book of rare grace and presence, Communion transported me from its opening pages. It is a deeply moving novel about faith, doubt and morality, held firm by a steady beat of love * Megan Hunter, author of Days of Light * A highly original book that strips back the traditional architecture of the novel until each paragraph arrives like a short, beautiful breath, and in the silences between, the true voices of Port Talbot are able to sing through. A thrilling evocation of a community * Andrew McMillan, author of Pity * Electric... A wonderful, brilliant piece of work. Just brilliant. This is someone with a voice, with something to say, with a natural talent * Kasim Ali, author of Good Intentions * A startling interrogation of class identity, Catholicism and masculinity. It questions whether community binds or blinds us, asking what it means to speak against the people and places we come from when the fabric of such places is under threat. This timely, prescient novel asks how communities might nourish us, and when they begin to cut us off from the wider world * Jessica Andrews, author of Milk Teeth * Jon Doyle is a great new voice - and an important one. His work is real in the very best sense: exactly observed, often funny and unafraid of the greatest themes * Tom Bullough, author of Sarn Helen and Addlands * Gritty and luminous, intelligent and sincere, a radical and transgressive novel in which the profane, the political and the personal are entirely rooted in the sacred. Communion is both tender and confrontational, an immaculate debut with dirt under its fingernails * Colin Walsh, author of Kala * A book of rare grace and presence, Communion transported me from its opening pages. It is a deeply moving novel about faith, doubt and morality, held firm by a steady beat of love * Megan Hunter, author of Days of Light * A highly original book that strips back the traditional architecture of the novel until each paragraph arrives like a short, beautiful breath, and in the silences between, the true voices of Port Talbot are able to sing through. A thrilling evocation of a community * Andrew McMillan, author of Pity * A rare novel. Communion bears witness to quiet accumulating impacts, a tolling, calling out the fundamental question, what happens when the things at the centre of what we try to believe in gutter out, one by one? This is poignant, resounding writing. * Cynan Jones, author of Pulse * Electric... A wonderful, brilliant piece of work. Just brilliant. This is someone with a voice, with something to say, with a natural talent * Kasim Ali, author of Good Intentions * A startling interrogation of class identity, Catholicism and masculinity. It questions whether community binds or blinds us, asking what it means to speak against the people and places we come from when the fabric of such places is under threat. This timely, prescient novel asks how communities might nourish us, and when they begin to cut us off from the wider world * Jessica Andrews, author of Milk Teeth * Jon Doyle is a great new voice - and an important one. His work is real in the very best sense: exactly observed, often funny and unafraid of the greatest themes * Tom Bullough, author of Sarn Helen and Addlands * Author InformationJon Doyle is a writer based in Port Talbot, South Wales. He was part of Literature Wales' Representing Wales scheme in 2022/23, and won the Writers & Artists Working-Class Writers' Prize 2023. He holds a BSc and MRes in Zoology, an MA in Creative Writing from Cardiff University, and a PhD in Creative Writing from Swansea University. His work has appeared in Short Fiction, Hobart, Ploughshares Online, The Rumpus, 3:AM Magazine, Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction among other places. Communion is his first novel. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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