Victoria Segal 

The Good Son by Paul McVeigh review – Belfast boy in the 80s

McVeigh’s debut novel features a deightful narrator struggling to negotiate poverty, paranoia and violence as the Troubles rumble on
  
  

The British Army face protesters in West Belfast in 1981.
Soldiers face protesters in West Belfast in 1981. Photograph: Alain Le Garsmeur/Getty Images Photograph: Alain Le Garsmeur/Getty Images

The summer holidays are a time of dread for Mickey Donnelly. Secondary education is looming, but the prohibitive cost of the grammar school uniform has deprived him of his best chance to escape from Belfast’s turbulent Ardoyne neighbourhood. This isn’t the only cloud hanging over the delightful narrator of Paul McVeigh’s debut novel, however: The Good Son’s early-80s backdrop is one of poverty, paranoia and violence, both sectarian and domestic, a terrifying world for a boy whose best friend is his little sister and whose favourite film is The Wizard of Oz. If McVeigh occasionally overplays the ra-ra skirts and retro advertising jingles, there’s no nostalgia in the depiction of simmering brutality and intense claustrophobia in a place where everyone – British soldiers, the IRA, the neighbours – is watching everyone else. A rare trip beyond his immediate environment opens Mickey’s eyes: “So rich people don’t have the Troubles. As well as havin’ everythin’ else. It’s just not fair.” With The Good Son, McVeigh allows the reader a similarly new perspective, a full-colour close-up of life in a no-go area.

• To order The Good Son for £6.74 (RRP £8.99) go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over £10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of £1.99.

• This review was amended on 18 May 2015 to update the RRP and discounted Bookshop prices.

 

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