Born in Co. Wexford, ANDREW HUGHES was educated at Trinity College, Dublin. A qualified archivist, he worked for RTE before going freelance. It was while researching his acclaimed social history of Fitzwilliam Square - Lives Less Ordinary- Dublin's Fitzwilliam Square, 1798-1922 - that he first came across the true story of John Delahunt that inspired his debut novel, The Convictions of John Delahunt. Andrew Hughes lives in Dublin.
A quite exceptional novel ... The world he creates has echoes of Kafka and Orwell ... totally convincing. It draws you in like a trap. C. J. SANSOM, author of Dissolution and Winter in Madrid Unputdownable ... chillingly portrayed ... a highly sophisticated first novel. CHARLES PALLISER, author of The Quincunx Compelling and eerily authentic ... Read it and be grateful to be alive in our day and age. ROBERT GODDARD A dark, original story wrapped in a wonderful gothic gloom ... it's a tough act to pull off, but Andrew Hughes manages it with brio. I heard echoes of James Hogg and Robert Louis Stevenson. ANDREW TAYLOR, author of The American Boy and The Scent of Death Reminiscent of John Banville's The Book of Evidence ... a bracing, lurid tale that is as engrossing as it is chilling. -- Declan Burke IRISH INDEPENDENT A vivid piece of writing ... brings to mind Andrew Miller's Costa-winning novel, Pure. IRISH TIMES Extraordinarily detailed world, impeccably researched ... so superbly written that it soars as a masterly work of fiction ... utterly compelling. -- Dermot Bolger IRISH MAIL ON SUNDAY An intriguing debut (that) sets out Hughes as one to watch. SUNDAY TIMES IRELAND A skilfully planned, elegantly written debut ... a riveting read. SUNDAY INDEPENDENT Stupendous: a brilliant achievement for a first novel, completely compelling and with a perfectly damaged central character. MANDA SCOTT