A saga: its serious pleasures are its expansiveness and range, and Airey's rare, particular instinct... a cool, bold image of female pain and liberation * Guardian *
Confessions is a remarkable debut. A complex and compulsive read that unravels the intricate twists and revelations among three generations of women with elegance and urgency -- Miranda Cowley Heller, author of THE PAPER PALACE
CONFESSIONS is a beating heart of a novel, intricate both in its weaving and its unspooling. An irresistible read -- Yael van der Wouden, author of THE SAFEKEEP
An intricately woven epic, Confessions is both intimate and expansive, a novel that teems with raw, hungry life -- Colin Walsh, author of KALA
I was mesmerized from the very first pages of Catherine Airey's startling debut, Confessions. The story of Maire and Roisin, two Irish sisters living an ocean apart, proceeds with an almost hypnotic power and grace - it has the certainty of fable and the true originality of a powerful new voice in fiction. -- Tara Conklin, New York Times bestselling author of THE LAST ROMANTICS
Propulsive and utterly captivating ... Airey has shades of the American novelists Donna Tartt and Jeffrey Eugenides in her style * Irish Times *
The beautifully written narrative goes on to reveal the secrets of three generations of women. It's an epic family saga involving a host of mysteries and I galloped to the end. I loved it. * Daily Mail *
The narrative zips along with the crackling intelligence of Donna Tartt, full of twists and zips, and genuine surprises... Confessions is an astonishing and remarkable novel, and truly deserving of all the accolades coming its way * Irish Independent *
Brilliantly conceived and magnificently executed, I truly could not put it down. I haven't come across as honest, truthful, compelling, and gripping a writer for decades. The work of a debut novelist that feels like the work of a seasoned and highly accomplished author -- Anna Fitzgerald, author of GIRL IN THE MAKING
Confessions is a tender and bitingly original work that effortlessly weaves the parochial weight of Irish family history with the mendacious allure of Manhattan's seedy streets. Catherine Airey reads like a natural successor to Maeve Brennan, a chronicler of the pain and peril of self-determination. -- Darragh McKeon, award-winning author of REMEMBRANCE SUNDAY