The boy from the sea

Garrett Carr, 1975-

Book - 2025

"1973. In a close-knit community on Ireland's west coast, a baby is found abandoned on the beach. Named Brendan Bonnar by Ambrose, the fisherman who adopts him, Brendan will become a source of fascination and hope for a town caught in the storm of a rapidly changing world. Ambrose, a man more comfortable at sea than on land, brings Brendan into his home out of love. But it's a decision that will fracture his family and force him to try to understand himself and those he cares for. Bookended by the arrival and departure of a single mesmerising boy, Garrett Carr's The Boy From the Sea is an exploration of the ties that make us and bind us, as a family and community move irresistibly towards the future"--

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FICTION/Carr Garret
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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Carr Garret (NEW SHELF) Due Jul 22, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Domestic fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Garrett Carr, 1975- (author)
Edition
First U.S. hardcover edition
Item Description
"A Borzoi book"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
326 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780593802885
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Carr (The Rule of the Land, a travelogue) serves up an enticing panorama of a small Irish fishing village transformed by the discovery of an infant abandoned in a barrel on the beach. Fisherman Ambrose Bonnar and his wife, Christine, take in the baby and raise him alongside their toddler, Declan. They name the boy Brendan and he becomes the talk of the townsfolk, who refer to him as "the boy from the sea" and are pleased when the Bonnars formally adopt him, even as the move causes a rift between Christine and her sister, who resents being left alone to care for their aging father. When the kids enter school, however, Declan distances himself from Brendan and ignores him. By the time Brendan is a preteen, he takes to going on long aimless walks around the village, during which he encounters residents who tell him their troubles and he gives them his blessings. The perspective continuously shifts from one character to another, and readers will wish for a bit more depth, especially when it comes to the one-dimensional Declan. Still, Carr manages to paint a colorful portrait of the townsfolk via their curiosity about Brendan's origins and their belief that he can help them. Readers will be hooked. Agent: Irene Baldoni, Georgina Capel Assoc. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A surprise arrival at an Irish fishing town upends a family and community. The debut adult novel by Carr opens in 1973, as a barrel carrying a newborn baby appears on the shore of Killybegs. The arrival of a Moseslike prophet? An infant abandoned by a desperate young mother? The novel's collective narrator notes that the townspeople are open to various interpretations. After being passed from home to home, he's adopted by a fisherman, Ambrose, and his wife, Christine, who name him Brendan. The boy's arrival stokes resentment in his new older brother, Declan, and it intensifies the sibling rivalry between Christine and her sister, Phyllis, who's taking care of their widower father down the lane. Neither's sour mood will appreciably dissipate in the decades that follow. Carr's depiction of this milieu is expert on two fronts. First, he's gifted at capturing the excitement and tension of seafaring life, as Ambrose struggles to keep his beloved ship functioning and profitable amid high seas and an increasingly corporatized industry. Second and more important, Carr thoughtfully explores the ways Brendan's peculiar origin story complicates a variety of family relationships, as well as Brendan's own self-image--for a time in his teens, he and the community take the prophet interpretation seriously, and he delivers "blessings" around town. Declan's decisions, as well as the sisters', often hinge on their subconscious feelings about Brendan and need for Ambrose's esteem, which Carr grasps as both liberating and constricting. Later chapters explore Brendan's true provenance, but even without that information it would still be a sharp, well-made work about the complications of everyday parenthood and siblinghood. An intimate and psychologically savvy domestic drama. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.