
ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Freight Books
FORMAT: Electronic book text
ISBN: 9781908754202
RRP: £8.99
PAGES: 288
PUBLICATION DATE:
June 17, 2013
BUY THIS BOOK
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate we earn from qualifying purchases.
All The Little Guns Went Bang Bang Bang
Neil Mackay
Pearse Furlong and May-Belle Mulholland are two apparently normal eleven year-olds who meet one summer in small town Antrim, Northern Ireland, in the early 1980s. They have little in common except a shared experience of violent, abusive parents. They form an unlikely alliance and, as their games and shared fantasies spin out of control, their friendship becomes something much darker, with theft, arson, sickening brutality – and eventually murder – all lying ahead. A veteran of twenty years of crime reporting – including on children who kill – as well as many of the biggest stories during The Troubles in Northern Ireland, award-winning news journalist Neil Mackay has created a shocking, pitch black debut novel. Through blackly comic and often visceral prose, he not only demonstrates his deep understanding for his subject but also an extraordinary empathy for children damaged by society’s neglect. In Pearse and May-Belle he has created an unforgettable folie a deux and a coruscating satire on the brutality at the fringes of society that many choose to ignore.
Neil Mackay
Neil Mackay is a multi-award winning investigative journalist, newspaper executive, non-fiction author, radio broadcaster, film-maker and playwright. He has won around two dozen national and international awards for his newspaper journalism. Mackay was a launch editor of the Sunday Herald newspaper, and has subsequently been the paper’s Crime Editor, Investigations Editor and Head of News. His last film, an investigation into the rise of the far right in Europe and America, was nominated for a BAFTA. His book, The War on Truth, which investigated the roots of the invasion of Iraq, was published in the UK and USA, and has been commissioned as a stage play by the National Theatre of Scotland. He has written for the Sunday Herald, The Observer, Scotland on Sunday, Ireland’s Sunday Tribune, Australia’s The Age and most newspapers in Northern Ireland.