Cormac James was born in Cork, Ireland, and now lives in France. His first novel, Track and Field, was published in 2000.
'A remarkable achievement...A stylish novel, full of music and quiet control.' Colum McCann 'Extraordinary...Reading the book, I recalled the dramatic natural landscape of Jack London and the wild untamed seas of William Golding. Cormac James' writing is ambitious enough to be compared with either.' John Boyne 'Very assured, with a harsh poetic edge...powerful and compelling.' Rose Tremain 'The cool precision of James's writing draws you on as surely as if you're there, trapped in that claustrophobic interior with the vast northern landscape stretching forever outside.' Irish Times 'This is a book for grownups, one that finds its best hope not in romance or friendship or the drama of seeking and finding, because none of those things happen, but in the capacity of human beings to endure...an austere pleasure to read.' Guardian 'A highly original and poetic story of isolation and responsibility upon the sea...Writers as diverse as Homer, Conrad, Melville and William Golding have led the way [with ship-based narratives] and James picks up the baton - or oar - wielding it with great skill...The writing sparkles with inventiveness. The real strength of the novel, however, lies in the powerful descriptions of nature at its wildest, vivid images of sea and sky, and the carefully constructed dialogue of the men.' -- John Boyne Irish Times 'An engrossing, well-researched read. However, it is James' willingness to break free from the limitations of the traditional Arctic tale that takes the novel beyond the genre and widens its appeal.' Irish Independent 'A slow-burning psychological study...James expertly captures both the terror and the overwhelming boredom of sea life.' Kirkus 'The Surfacing achieves a hard-won emotional punch.' Gutter Magazine 'Like the High Arctic world that he masterfully conjures, his storytelling is beautifully stark and captivating. The Surfacing lures with the tundra's promise: new life can come from death.' -- Paul Watson, author of Where War Lives 'A nuanced meditation on fatherhood...The joy is in the prose, lyrical but not overblown, and the winningly straightforward plot.' Geographical Magazine