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The Devil's Footprints

John Burnside

$38.99

Paperback

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English
Vintage
15 March 2008
A breathtaking novel by the author of A Lie About My Father.

Once, on a winter's night many years ago, after a heavy snow, the devil passed through the Scottish fishing town of Coldhaven, leaving a trail of dark hoofprints across the streets and roofs of the sleeping town.

Michael Gardiner has lived in Coldhaven all his life, but still feels like an outsider, a blow-in. When Moira Birnie decides that her abusive husband is the devil and then kills herself and her two young sons, a terrible chain of events begins. Michael's infatuation with Moira's teenage daughter takes him on a journey towards a defined fate, where he is forced to face his present and then, finally, his past...
By:  
Imprint:   Vintage
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 129mm,  Spine: 14mm
Weight:   160g
ISBN:   9780099479543
ISBN 10:   0099479540
Pages:   224
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 0 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

John Burnside was among the most acclaimed writers of his generation. His novels, short stories, poetry and memoirs won numerous awards, including the Geoffrey Faber Memorial, Saltire Scottish Book of the Year and, in 2023, he received the David Cohen Prize for a lifetime's achievement in literature. In 2011 Black Cat Bone won both the Forward and the T.S. Eliot Prizes for poetry.

Reviews for The Devil's Footprints

A quasi-mystery that spends too much time within the mind of the uninteresting first-person narrator.The Scottish-born Burnside (A Lie About My Father: A Memoir, 2007, etc.) returns to his native land with a plot that suggests the presence of the devil in an isolated seaside village, while leaving the identity of that devil open-ended. Protagonist Michael Gardiner sets the plot in motion when he learns of the suicide of a woman he dated as a teenager. The woman, Moira Birnie, set her car ablaze with her young children inside. Curiously, she left behind her 14-year-old daughter Hazel. Michael suspects that Moira killed her children and herself to escape her devil of a husband, Tom. But why has she spared Hazel? After doing his calendar calculations, Michael suspects that Hazel isn't Tom's daughter, but his own. Since Michael's marriage is all but dead, and most of the marriages in the village seem as troubled as Moira and Tom's apparently was, Michael's obsession with Hazel provides new life (at least in his mind) for the two of them. Yet in the novel's evocation of Lolita, there's something a little creepy in the way that Hazel becomes his life's focus. Within the yo-yo of the novel's chronology (as Michael spends more time living in the past than the present), the reader learns that the Gardiners have long endured an adversary relationship with the rest of the village, that Michael and his parents have kept fatal secrets from each other and that Michael has a history of both sleepwalking and dreaming a parallel reality that he sometimes has trouble distinguishing from his waking one. With Michael's insistence that he's losing his mind as the novel progresses, it becomes harder for the reader to distinguish what's really happening. And whether the fault lies with the novelist or his protagonist, none of the characters that Michael describes seem fully formed.The novel ultimately ties some knots but leaves too many strands loose. (Kirkus Reviews)


  • Short-listed for James Tait Black Memorial Book Prize: Fiction 2008
  • Short-listed for The Clare Maclean Prize for Scottish Fiction 2007
  • Shortlisted for James Tait Black Memorial Book Prize: Fiction 2008.
  • Shortlisted for James Tait Black Memorial Book Prizes: Fiction 2008.
  • Shortlisted for The Clare Maclean Prize for Scottish Fiction 2007.

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