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Moïra Fowley

Author of The Accident Season

5 Works 1,401 Members 55 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Moïra Fowley

The Accident Season (2015) 649 copies, 31 reviews
Spellbook of the Lost and Found (2017) 409 copies, 11 reviews
All the Bad Apples (2019) 259 copies, 12 reviews
Eyes Guts Throat Bones (2023) 83 copies, 1 review

Tagged

2019 (6) abuse (8) ARC (11) audiobook (7) contemporary (11) ebook (12) family (18) fantasy (44) fiction (55) ghosts (14) goodreads (7) goodreads import (10) Ireland (33) Irish author (7) LGBT (9) LGBTQ (20) LGBTQ+ (9) magic (7) magical realism (48) mystery (31) paranormal (19) read (11) read in 2016 (7) romance (7) supernatural (7) teen (7) to-read (329) YA (45) young adult (48) young adult fiction (11)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Fowley, Moïra
Birthdate
20th century
Gender
female
Education
Trinity College Dublin (Mx|Popular literature)
Agent
Claire Wilson
Nationality
Ireland
Places of residence
Dublin, Ireland
Associated Place (for map)
Dublin, Ireland

Members

Reviews

58 reviews
I found this a compelling read and I definitely stayed up well past my bedtime with this one.
This is a story of a girl who is trying to deal with an absent father, a stressed aunt who is standing in for her mother who died shortly after she was born and coming out as gay in a conservative secondary school. When her other aunt, with whom she is quite close, disappears and is presumed dead, she, in a fit of grief, goes on a quest to find out more about her ancestors, a project her aunt was show more working on. On her way she finds a legacy of ancestors who paid a price for love and awkward fumbles and experience pregnancy in all it's shades of shame and late 19th and 20th century Ireland. It includes Magdalene Laundries, being evicted by a landlord, being outcaste and shame.
Deena also discovers herself, her ancestors, her sexuality (and not a little bit of romance) and the power of friends who care and family. Mostly set in 2012, before abortion was legalised in Ireland and before some of the current backlash had set in, it's interesting to see a largely LGBTQ+ cast of characters roadtripping their way through Ireland. Largely relying on the kindness of strangers.
There's a suggestion of background Irish mystical stuff and some women who are referred to as Banshees but could easily be angry grey-haired post-menopausal women who are done dealing with society's stuff, and some apple trees that have links to the past but it's pretty normal Irish stuff. Some may find it a bit woo but I found it made it more rooted in Ireland.
The metaphor of bad apples was interesting and I liked how it was resolved in the end.
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Every year Cara and her family go through a period of bruising and breaking and battering as one mishap after another, large and small, plague them and mark them and sometimes inflict tragedy on them. This is a very odd thing, but this year there are more odd things to come. Why does Elsie, a girl Cara used to be friends with it, appear in all her photographs? Why isn't she turning up at school and why do none of he teachers and classmates seem to know who she is? Searching for Elsie, show more organising a Halloween party in a haunted house, and enduring accident after accident, Cara and her sister, step-brother and best friend begin to uncover the terrible, life-changing secrets behind the Accident Season.

The Accident Season has a terrific premise, wonderfully drawn characters, a spooky and eerie atmosphere, but what elevates it is the quality of the writing, beautiful and polished, full of strange and arresting imagery and insights into life and love and friendship. The whole book feels strange and supernatural long before any supernatural element is hinted at. But at the same time it remains grounded both physically and emotionally. A great achievement.
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Oh my goodness, this book. I barely had an inkling of what All The Bad Apples had in store for me, and I’m actually glad for that. It made discovering this book all the more bittersweet. See, there is a deep message under all the beautiful, lyrical writing. By the time I reached the ending of this story, I was in tears. I’d honestly be surprised if you aren’t as well.

Deena lives in a world where being a “nice, normal girl” is what is expected. Raised by her older sister, judged show more from afar by her absent father, attending a strict Catholic school, Deena feels hemmed in. She notes the girls around her who are brave enough to stand tall, to show their true colors, but she doesn’t know how to be one of them. This is why I loved Deena, and why I’m so glad that she was our main character. She wasn’t immediately fierce, but instead her bravery grew as she went on the journey to find her missing sister. A hero’s journey, if you will. Each piece of the puzzle that fell into place, each lesson learned from her ancestors, brought her closer and closer to the person that she wanted to be. It was a beautiful, brutally honest journey, and it was just perfect.

I loved how Fowley-Doyle was able to bring in so much rich, albeit damning, history into this story. Deena’s journey is told in alternating chapters between current day Ireland, and historical Ireland. Within these chapters, the author starkly lays out the similarities between people who lived hundereds of years ago, and the girls who are involved in the modern day story. It’s terrifying how much similarity there is between the two of them. There’s a definite focus on the people considered to be on the fringes of society, or the bad apples if you will. People who dared to love outside of the “norm”. People who looked different, or acted different, or merely wanted something more than what society told them they should have. I can’t express enough how poignant all of that is. I don’t want to spoil anything, since this is something to discover, but reading the author’s note at the end broke my heart in two. I had no idea of this history before this book, and I’m so glad that it was all laid out for me in such a spectacular way.

Admittedly, you’ll need to suspend disbelief to really appreciate this story. It reads much like the fairy tales of old, where good things happen to good people and true villains are as human as the rest of us. It reads in an almost magical mannner, blurring that line between the real world and the fairy tale one that lurks underneath. I thought it was a perfect way to tell this sometimes tragic and sometimes hopeful tale. I ended with a full heart, and that’s pretty much the best explanation I can give you as to why you need to read this book.

If you’re looking for something historically based, that will enchant you and make you cry, this is your book.
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Absolutely STUNNING. I went into this only mildly interested because of a youtuber recommendation, not really expecting much, but I was blown away.

The author created such incredibly vibrant characters that seemed real with stories that are, unfortunately, the realities of so many people like them today.

This book did get off to a slow start, but I quickly found myself dying to know what happens next to Deena and in her family's history.

Throughout this book, I found myself almost crying at show more the horrors that the characters suffered, especially since so much of it actually happened, and continues to happen.

I don't want to say too much, but this is absolutely a must read.
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Lindsey Andrews Cover designer
Ines Rehberger Cover photo
Micaela Alcaino Cover designer

Statistics

Works
5
Members
1,401
Popularity
#18,325
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
55
ISBNs
54
Languages
6

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