The Brothers’ Lot

Kevin Holohan

A hilariously satirical debut novel exploring religious hypocrisy in an Irish grade school.

Combining the spirit of Kingsley Amis’s Lucky Jim with a bawdy evisceration of hypocrisy in old-school Catholic education, The Brothers’ Lot is a comic satire that tells the story of the Brothers of Godly Coercion School for Young Boys of Meager Means, a dilapidated Dickensian institution run by an assemblage of eccentric, insane, and often nasty celibate Brothers. The school is in decline and the Brothers hunger for a miracle to move their founder, the Venerable Saorseach O’Rahilly, along the path to Sainthood.

When a possible miracle presents itself, the Brothers fervently seize on it with the help of the ethically pliant Diocesan Investigator, himself hungry for a miracle to boost his career. The school simultaneously comes under threat from strange outside forces. The harder the Brothers try to defend the school, the worse things seem to get. It takes an outsider, Finbar Sullivan, a young student newly arrived at the school, to see that the source of the threat may in fact lie inside the school itself. As the miracle unravels, the Brothers’ efforts to preserve it unleash a disastrous chain of events.

Paperback

RRP: £7.99

ISBN: 9781842435052

Published: August 21, 2011

Extent: 320 pages

Ebook

RRP: £4.99

ISBN: 9781842435076

Published: May 25, 2011

Reviews

‘Subversive fun . . . but there is fury behind Holohan’s satire’

Alfred Hickling , Guardian

‘The Brothers’ Lot is unforgettable’

Linda L. Richards , January Magazine

‘a mordantly funny debut from Dublin native Holohan’

Publishers Weekly

‘funny, fast-paced with one crisis after another, but always pulls at the heartstrings’

Connie Aitcheson , The Brooklyn Rail

‘a compelling and frightening story of what happens to both children and adults when the forms of religion replace the heart of it’

Susan Hedahl , Hedahl Book Look

Kevin Holohan

Kevin Holohan was born in Dublin. He is a graduate of University College Dublin and a veteran of a high school education at the hands of the Christian Brothers in Dublin. His short stories have been published in Cyphers, the Sunday Tribune (Dublin), and, most recently, in Whispers and Shouts. His poetry has been published in Studies, Casablanca, Envoi, and Poetry Ireland.

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