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Review | Ireland’s ‘Troubles’ the backdrop to The Colony, Audrey Magee’s novel about a small fictional colonial struggle

  • The Troubles insert themselves into The Colony as an intermittent, always violent journal
  • Magee holds back the greatest impact of the colonist on the colonised until the book’s end

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Murals depicting “The Troubles” on the walls of houses at the Bogside, a prominently catholic and Irish nationalist neighbourhood, in Derry, Northern Ireland, UK, on May 2, 2022. Photo: Bloomberg

The Colony, by Audrey Magee. Published by Faber & Faber

Audrey Magee’s bestselling first novel, The Undertaking (2014), starts with a mud-stuck wedding, absentee bride, lice-infested bridegroom and the invasion of Ukraine (by Germans including the groom): the desperation of war, and a reminder still that life is desperately, darkly funny.

Her new novel begins with a lighter comic touch. Mr Lloyd, an English artist on his way to a summer’s painting on a tiny island off the Irish coast, is overseeing the loading of the currach, a small, hand-built boat belonging to the islander Francis. Lloyd’s anxious formality is set against Francis’ earthy pragmatism:

This one is heavy, he said.

It’ll be grand, Mr Lloyd. Pass it down. […]

Are they [easel and chest] secure?

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