The First Day
On sale
15th June 2017
Price: £8.99
Outside an east Belfast mission hall, pastor and family man Samuel Orr meets Anna, a young Beckett scholar. They embark on an intense love affair, their connection fuelled by their respective passions. When Anna falls pregnant, the affair is revealed. The repercussions are slow to emerge but inescapable, and the fallout is shocking, cruel and violent.
More than thirty years later Sam, their son, is in New York, living a steady, guarded life, his childhood and family safely abandoned.
But the sins of the fathers are not to be so easily buried; the past crashes inevitably into the present, and Sam is forced to confront the fears he has kept close for decades.
More than thirty years later Sam, their son, is in New York, living a steady, guarded life, his childhood and family safely abandoned.
But the sins of the fathers are not to be so easily buried; the past crashes inevitably into the present, and Sam is forced to confront the fears he has kept close for decades.
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Reviews
Filmic in its scope and intensity . . . I hope we're in for more from this striking new voice in fiction
Set in a defamiliarised Belfast, The First Day is an auspicious debut - crisp, spare, lean and compelling
A wonderful debut. A fully engaging, well-written, very imaginative novel
Deeply disturbing, morally challenging . . . remarkable
Harrison writes well and brings Belfast and the sectarian conflict vividly to life
Written with a burning intensity, this is a powerful novel about marriage, passion, anger and guilt
Gripping . . . This is a truly excellent novel, on all counts. The First Day is as well-written as any Irish novel I've read, with tight, dispassionate and superbly controlled prose
The First Day is a stark and spare story of a family divided . . . a stark and spare story of a family divided
Hugely impressive. A finely written tale which is original, compulsive, and at times chilling
This is a truly excellent novel, on all counts . . . an unflinching yet compassionate investigation of matters of the human heart . . . [a] fine work of artistic invention
Terrific, it is expanding and expanding all the time, like its own model universe - I just think it is pretty marvellous
The First Day is an age-old story of forbidden love, given fresh resonance against the backdrop of the fractured, changing but still deeply conservative society that is contemporary Northern Ireland.
Phil Harrison writes with compassion and tenderness, never veering into sentimentality, about his young Beckett scholar and the married pastor she falls in love with. He has a screenwriter's ear for the way people talk, the cadences and omissions of their speech, and in particular the speech of religious Ulster, still rooted so deeply in the language and rhythms of the King James Bible. He illuminates a people - a place - seeking to escape from itself, seeking transfiguration, but desperately bound to what has gone before
In true Belfast style, Phil Harrison has planted a flag. The First Day is not just a novel, it's a declaration, full worthy of salute