A review by lep42
The Thing about December by Donal Ryan

4.0

This was a hard one for me to get into, review, and rate. It was unrelentingly grim. I like my depressing Irish books, but I usually like them with a bit more black humor (like Claire Kilroy's [b:The Devil I Know|15836820|The Devil I Know|Claire Kilroy|https://d.gr-assets.com/books/1345407641s/15836820.jpg|21575224]). The number of bad things that happened to Johnsey made the book almost unbelievable for me. On the other hand, although it took me awhile to get into the dialect (probably not a problem for Irish readers), I found Donal Ryan's prose gorgeous and there were several extremely poignant quotations about the nature of the human conditions. Passages like the one below took my breath away.

"Loneliness covers the earth like a blanket. It flows in the stream down through the Callows to the lake. It's in the muck in the yard and the briars in the haggard and the empty outbuildings are bursting with it. It runs down the walls inside of the house like tears and grows on the walls outside like a poisonous choking weed. It's in the sky and the stones and the clouds and the grass. The air is thick with it: you breath it into your lungs and you feel like it might suffocate you. It runs into hollow places like rainwater. It settles on the grass and on trees and takes their shapes and all the earth is wet with it. It has a smell, like the inside of a saucepan: scrapped metal, cold and sharp. When it hits you, it feels like a rap of a hurl across your knuckles on a frosty winter's morning. in PE: sharp, shocking pain, but inside you, so it can't be seen and no one says sorry for causing it nor asks are you ok, and no kind teacher wants to look at it and tut-tut and tell you you'll be grand, good lad. But you know if another man stood where you're standing and looked at the same things he wouldn't see it or feel it."