Reviews
The most enjoyable new novel I came across this year. A sprawling, Franzen-esque saga about the Barnes family in Ireland recovering from the 2008 financial crisis,
it’s an amazing piece of realist fiction, full-bodied, multi-narrative; a huge swing by Murray
[The Bee Sting] reads like an instant classic . . . Murray is a fantastically witty and empathetic writer, and
he dazzles by somehow bringing the great sprawling randomness of life to glamorously choreographed climaxes. He is essentially interested in the moral conflicts of our lives, and he handles his characters and their failings with heartbreaking tenderness
Murray’s writing is pure joy —
propulsive, insightful and seeded with hilarious observations . . . Through the Barneses’ countless personal dramas, Murray explores humanity’s endless contradictions: How brutal and beautiful life is. How broken and also full of potential. How endlessly fraught and persistently promising. Whether or not we can ever truly change our course, the hapless Barneses will keep you hoping, even after you turn the novel’s last page
The overall tapestry Murray weaves is not one of desolation but of hope.
This is a book that showcases one family’s incredible love and resilience even as their world crumbles around them
The Bee Sting is far and away the most entertaining of the novels on this year’s Booker shortlist,
a fat slab of joyous readability – but which doesn’t stint on emotional depth
[A] wonderful saga . . . [
The Bee Sting] brilliantly explores how our self-deceptions ultimately catch up with us, and is
at once hilarious and heartbreaking
A first-class piece of immersive fiction –
sharp-witted and clear-eyed but big-hearted – that doesn’t feel as if it’s in retreat from reality
[The Bee Sting] has been a revelation: I loved every second of reading this. I found myself reaching for it on tubes and buses, stealing five minutes to read it as I waited for a coffee, staying up late to read in bed, despite my near-religious sleeping schedule.
It has been a pleasure to read, and to say that it’s changed my outlook on reading, my choices, and tastes, would be an understatement.
The Bee Sting has allowed me to re-evaluate my prior notions, and to get out of my own way for discovering new fiction
I’m going to climb on the log-rolling bandwagon by recommending Paul Murrays achingly tragicomic
The Bee Sting.
Few, if any, Irish writers have ever succeeded in sketching contemporary midlands Ireland in such queasy yet humane detail. Himself a Dub, Murray brings a rare outsiders eye to an unfashionable and overlooked milieu
Triumphant . . . the best sort of holiday reading:
engrossingly long, incredibly funny, impossibly sad
I’m a sucker for a tragicomic family saga [and]
Paul Murray has produced a masterpiece of the form.
The Bee Sting is a mosaic-like account of one family’s misery when their car business hits the skids in post-crash Ireland . . .
It’s an engrossing (and hilarious) story of blackmail and betrayal, thwarted romance and freak accidents
The book I’ve recommended most this year – and had the most enthusiastic feedback about, a whopping 656 pages later – is without doubt Paul Murray’s Booker-shortlisted tragicomedy,
The Bee Sting . . . combines freewheeling hilarity with savage irony, surprise reveals and generations-deep sadness; it
offers the immersive pleasures that perhaps only a fat family saga can bring
Paul Murray was robbed when it came to the Booker this year: his saga about a family scrambling for survival in recession blasted Ireland in 2008 is
one of the novels of the year. Told from the perspective of four members of the Barnes family, and unspooling back in time to reveal a host of buried sentences,
this effortlessly enjoyable novel overflows with human detail
This
propulsive, humane, thrillingly unpredictable story of a family in free-fall was robbed at this year’s Booker . . . bold, original . . . Murray gives a totally fresh perspective on subjects from abuse to money, sexuality, love, climate disaster and violence, while
conjuring characters who leap off the page
A tour de force of fiction . . . Murray expertly gives us each family member’s perspective of the same events – with flashbacks unravelling an intricate story of betrayal, crime and lust.
Profound on the human condition, utterly gripping and peppered with comedy, your giftee will love it just as much as our reviewer did
Funny, lyrical and heartbreaking, Paul Murray's Booker nominated family saga is perfect Betwixmas reading
Paul Murray is a confident, stylish writer: he convincingly evokes a teenage girl’s rage, a boy’s fear, a father’s secrets and a mother’s disappointments and grief
Funny and painful with ghosts from the past and spectres from the future
At over 600 pages,
The Bee Sting may not appear the friendliest looking of reads . . . but don’t let the length put you off –
this book earns every page . . . A tragicomedy,
this novel is expansive in reach and has a climax that will stay with you long after the final page
This is probably
the most conventionally satisfying novel of 2023 . . .
It is so engrossing that you will always want to be reading it and after you have finished it the characters stay with you. Murray is ostensibly a comic novelist, but he’s dealing in laughter in the dark by the end of this novel, which tackles economic uncertainty, climate crisis and the secrets that can define a family without some of its members realising
The idea of being swept up and spat out by falsehoods runs through much of Murray's work . . . There are storylines about doomsday preppers and local GAA teams; themes of class, economic collapse, ecological catastrophe . . . Murray's conversations have an expansive tendency.
A single thread can lead him outwards in a web of connections, metaphors, jokes, before he lands smoothly back on the point
I'm looking forward to Paul Murray's new family saga,
The Bee Sting; he's
such a sharp and funny writer
Immersive, brilliantly structured, beautifully written, so dense yet so compelling, [and] as laugh-out-loud funny as it is deeply disturbing . . .
The Bee Sting is as ambitious as anything that has gone before, but with a focus and shape that grants it great depth as well as breadth. Seriously, all you need is this, your suntan lotion and a few days off work and you're good to go . . . I didn't see the plot twists coming. And they keep on coming, And coming again . . .
I began with an ovation. I'll end abruptly, and in awe...
Paul Murray, the undisputed reigning champion of epic Irish tragicomedy, has done it again
A triumph. The Bee Sting deserves all the praise I am heaping on it. It is generous, immersive, sharp-witted and devastating; the sort of novel that becomes a friend for life
This bumper novel is already gaining plaudits as the book of the summer, and if it's a meaty, heart punching, expertly executed family saga you need this August, then you can stop the search now . . . Murray delivers scarcely a duff sentence in a 600-page novel that's
pure unadulterated pleasure.
It's been compared to Jonathan Franzen's The Corrections; I'd argue it's better than that
Delightfully rackety, raucously funny... The Bee Sting is on a par with Skippy Dies, Murray's most beloved book, and certainly exceeds it in ambition. A masterpiece
Murray is a natural storyteller who knows when to withhold, to indulge, to surprise. He specialises, like Dickens, in lengthy sagas that are mammoth in scope, generous with detail and backstory, flush with humour and colourful characters, all of it steeped in social realism . . .
Ambitious, expansive, hugely entertaining tragicomic fiction
Carefully paced, brilliantly convincing and helped along by plenty of subtle satire . . . A huge, marbled wagyu steak of a novel that ranges confidently from humane to horrifying. It's a classic family saga in the mode of The Corrections or The Sound and the Fury . . . Murray delights in taking a stock type - the sullen pubescent, the frazzled mother - and exploding it with ambiguity and empathy . . .
An immensely enjoyable piece of expert craftsmanship
Utterly absorbing . . . Every perfectly tooled sentence slips down as cleanly as an ice-cold Negroni
Fluid, funny and clever, exceptionally smartly structured . . . There's laughter in every other line, but there's also a compassion and a midlife wisdom at work
This epic, many-layered tragicomedy of an Irish family in crisis is as pleasurable to read as it is emotionally devastating
One of the best novels of the year . . .
a compelling, thought-provoking tragic-comic family drama, told in multiple voices, and set in Ireland. The characters, of all ages, are memorable and convincing, the plot is a cracker and
it will keep you gripped, amused and provoked throughout 656 brilliant pages
I experienced just about every possible human emotion while reading The Bee Sting, and at an intensity I have not felt with a work of fiction for a long time.
Its ambition and scale are astonishing, and as a sheer technical feat of storytelling it is remarkable. Reading it, I was constantly reminded of what the novel as an artform is capable of, and what it is for.
It might be a bold claim to make, of the author of Skippy Dies, that this new book is the best thing Paul Murray has ever done - but I'm making it anyway, because it's true
This novel is as generous, expansive, and glorious as a cathedral, as intimate as pillow-talk, and as funny and heartbreaking as nothing you've read before.
Paul Murray may just be the most spellbinding storyteller writing today. A magisterial piece of work
A family lurches into financial and emotional crisis in full view of judgmental neighbours in this
astute, remorselessly funny novel that switches between survivalist father Dickie, spendaholic housewife Imelda, surly teenager Cass and her loner brother PJ.
Murray gives us a capacious story of one Irish family that is
entertaining, heartbreaking and surprising - few of the characters turn out to be exactly who you thought they'd be
Every sentence in Paul Murray's brilliant family drama
The Bee Sting crackles with wit and ingenuity
A coruscating return for a novelist who's been keeping us waiting for something special since 2010's
Skippy Dies . . . a tragicomedy that never stints on great jokes - even at its saddest
Funny, dark, moving and deeply humane. It's also driven by an inexorable tragic force, and Murray's intricate narrative dexterity makes it very easy to keep turning all those hundreds of pages
A family lurches into financial and emotional crisis in full view of judgmental neighbours in this
astute, remorselessly funny novel about how people are invariably more complex than they first appear . . . Murray tackles some of the biggest issues facing our society in
a thoughtful, tragicomic novel exploring smalltown society and social class
Breathtaking, blackly comic, Murray's style is entirely and distinctively his own . . . Handling the plot as if it were a Rubik cube, [he] gives each character their voice in a carousel of first-person accounts, tracking backwards and into the present . . .
The Bee Sting is
an immersion in the tragedy of what-might-have-been
The tale of a dysfunctional family trying to hold things together. It's
a thing of beauty, a novel that will fill your heart
The Bee Sting has resulted in Murray being heralded "Dublin's Jonathan Franzen" . . .
No one does bittersweet comic novels quite like Murray - fans of his 2010 boarding school comedy
Skippy Dies will be aching to get their hands on this
One of the finest — and funniest — novels of 2023, this Booker-shortlisted tale of a troubled Irish family takes their financial, sexual and existential struggles and turns them into riotous comedy
A well-to-do Irish family falls apart in this
funny, corrosive and poignant novel . . . It’s an
unputdownable family saga
Murray balances humour with poignancy and makes each voice distinct, creating a believable, absorbing picture of a family in crisis.
Paul Murray is my favourite young Irish novelist and The Bee Sting confirms all of his talents. Settle in for a hilarious whirlwind of a familial socioeconomic misadventure as only Murray would write it
It can't be overstated how purely pleasurable The Bee Sting is to read.
Murray's brilliant new novel, about a rural Irish clan, posits the author as Dublin's answer to Jonathan Franzen . . . A 650-page slab of compulsive high-grade entertainment, The Bee Sting oozes pathos while being very funny to boot . . . Murray's observational gifts and A-game phrase-making render almost every page - every line, it sometimes seems - abuzz with fresh and funny insights . . . At its core this is a novel concerned with the ties that bind, secrets and lies, love and loss. They're all here, brought to life with captivating vigour in a first-class performance to cherish
The Bee Sting is the finest novel that Murray has yet written and will surely be one of the books of 2023 . . . It bears comparison to the brilliant comic writer Jonathan Coe... But Murray is his own writer, capable of keeping a multi-faceted and compulsive plot moving along with alacrity and confidence, while seamlessly blending drama, comedy and heartbreak...
For 13 years, Paul Murray has been best known as the author of Skippy Dies. That, I suspect, is about to change
Expertly foreshadowed and so intricately put together, a brilliantly funny, deeply sad portrait of an Irish family in crisis . . . Murray is triumphantly back on home turf - troubled adolescents, regretful adults, secrets signposted and exquisitely revealed, each line soaked in irony ranging from the gentle to the savage . . . We live though hundreds of pages on tenterhooks, and the suspense and revelations keep coming until the end [...] He is brilliant on fathers and sons, sibling rivalry, grief, self-sabotage and self-denial, as well as the terrible weakness humans have for magical thinking...
A tragicomic triumph, you won't read a sadder, truer, funnier novel this year
No one writes tragicomedy as good as this . . . Both brilliant entertainment and a penetrating look at the human condition, as heavy with pathos as it is rich with humour. And if 650 pages asks a lot of the reader, in this case it more than delivers
Bold [and] expansive . . . Paul Murray is consistently inventive, observant and funny. He is on intimate terms with this preteen boy, this teenage girl, this lost middle-aged man and this semi-educated woman, and he knows how to make them vivid . . . The pages turn rapidly as farce and tragedy converge, the latter threatening to get the upper hand
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