Published: 30/09/2021
Written with rare lyricism and an exquisite sense of place and time, Byrne's memoir of working-class Ireland and his subsequent acting career in Hollywood and on Broadway makes for spellbinding, sensual reading.
Our Irish Book of the Month for October 2021
Born to working-class parents and the eldest of six children, Gabriel Byrne harboured a childhood desire to become a priest. Four years later, Byrne had been expelled from an English seminary and he quickly returned to his native city. There he took odd jobs as a messenger boy and a factory labourer to get by. In his spare time he visited the cinema, where he could be alone and yet part of a crowd. It was here that he could begin to imagine a life beyond the grey world of '60s Ireland.
It was a friend who suggested Byrne join an amateur drama group, a decision that would change his life forever and launch him on an extraordinary forty-year career in film and theatre. Moving between sensual recollection of childhood in a now almost vanished Ireland and reflections on stardom in Hollywood and on Broadway, often through the lens of addiction. Hilarious and heartbreaking Walking With Ghosts is a lyrical homage to the people and landscapes that ultimately shape our destinies.
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
ISBN: 9781529027457
Number of pages: 224
Weight: 154 g
Dimensions: 196 x 130 x 14 mm
MEDIA REVIEWS
The wonder of this memoir is its unembellished truth. It is written by a man whose amazing story is the stuff of literature - Edna O'Brien
So beautiful, it seems extraordinary that [Byrne] has kept this light under a bushel all this time . . . Gorgeous - Graham Norton, BBC Radio 2
An absolutely marvellous book . . . beautifully written, poetic . . . it’s a really riveting read - Colm Tóibín
Gabriel Byrne has written the most beautiful memoir. This is haunting prose and wondrous, sad, uplifting, my book of the year - Claire Keegan
Walking With Ghosts is lavish with lyricism, but presents a pretty unvarnished version of its author . . . The book is also a conscious departure: stylistically ambitious, purposefully (and successfully) so - The Guardian
Thoughtful, moving and without a trace of self-indulgence, this honest and beautifully-written book reads more like a novel than a memoir, drawing the reader into a narrative that is full of courage, humour and above all, humanity. I really loved Walking with Ghosts and can't recommend it highly enough - Christine Dwyer Hickey
Imagine Séamus Heaney's eye falling on Hollywood's glare . . . it really did remind me of Séamus Heaney, it seemed to have that very sharp focus and also that wonderfully lyrical way of expressing it - Richard Coles, BBC Radio 4
Make no mistake about it: this is a masterpiece. A book that will wring out our tired hearts. It is by turns poetic, moving and very funny. You will find it on the shelf alongside other great Irish memoirs including those by Frank McCourt, Nuala O'Faolain and Edna O’Brien - Colum McCann, author of Let the Great World Spin
The allure of Gabriel Byrne's memoir is that it persuasively humanizes what it is to be a big deal movie star. Byrne is wonderfully without cant or bluster or phony humility. Instead he leads with felicity, candor, humor and empathy. In the end, he seems to be somebody you'd be glad to know - Richard Ford
Byrne arrives at a truth greater than an honest and sensitive memoir; he verges on a profoundly touching articulation of our short time on earth, time that will make of each of us nothing more or less than a ghost - Mia Colleran, Irish Independent
A wry and warm, swirling poetic reverie of a memoir - Colin Barrett
A joy of a book - full of heart and humour, beautifully told - Sinéad Gleeson
Destined to be a classic . . . What makes Gabriel Byrne a great writer is that he knows that whether we are wicked or good, few of us get what we deserve - Sunday Independent
Reading the book was a beautiful experience; it’s superb. It really is a very special book so if you love someone buy it for them for Christmas - Eamon Dunphy
Structured around an imaginary, haunted visit to the Dublin of his youth, the book does offer sketches from the movie wonderland – John Boorman being bossy on Excalibur, testy encounters with Laurence Olivier in the 1980s – but it is more to do with conjuring up a now-vanished Ireland. The smell of the Guinness brewery. Early acting experiences in a nativity play. The church, everywhere the church - Irish Times
The writing is so vivid it’s as if we are by Gabriel Byrne’s shoulder through the sorrowful times and the joyous moments. He weaves an intimate and absorbing tapestry of the poignant and the funny - Kirsty Wark
A working-class family memoir as well as a meditation on fame and its discontents - Sena O'Hagan, Observer
Walking with Ghosts is exquisite. This book feels like the culmination of a long literary career and not the debut of a famous actor. Byrne makes himself fully vulnerable while in total command of language and form. There is great truth and great beauty in this close examination of a life and the passage of time. I’ve never read a memoir so raw and honest and literary and absolutely, staggeringly brilliant - Lily King
[Byrne] writes with much more depth than the typical celebrity memoirist, accessing some of Seamus Heaney’s earthiness and James Joyce’s grasp of how Catholic guilt can shape an artist . . . A melancholy but gemlike memoir, elegantly written and rich in hard experience - Kirkus (starred review)
Mercurial, ferociously honest and moving . . . A poignant symphony of memories and dreams, longing and loss, in a search for the immigrants most elusive prize, home - Karl Geary, author of Montpelier
A poetic journey into those secret realms of memory which dominate our lives, but are rarely spoken about. By revealing himself with such courage, compassion, and exquisite poise, Gabriel Byrne gives readers that rare gift of being able to see themselves in the feelings of another person. This book is more than a memoir—it’s a mirror that reflects the deepest parts of us in exile - Simon Van Booy
A remembrance of the Ireland Byrne left behind, one which is no longer there - Hot Press, '2020 Books of the Year'
Dazzles with unflinching honesty, as it celebrates the exuberance of being alive to the world despite living through pain. [Byrne's] portrait of an artist as a young boy is steeped in nostalgia of the best sort, re-creating the pull of home . . . With this tender book — full of warm and often funny stories — Byrne shows us the depth of his true character - Washington Post
In emotional, evocative prose, Walking With Ghosts describes the town outside Dublin where [Byrne] grew up, the oldest of six children crammed into a small house, their father working as a barrel-maker for the Guinness brewery, everyone in each other’s business. They were steeped in Catholicism . . . In passages that are horrifying, then funny, then both, he describes, for instance, learning the story of Adam and Eve from a fire-and-brimstone nun, in a lesson that ends with God declaring to the fallen pair: 'And by the way, your children will be miserable as well.' ('That’s why the world is such an unhappy place,' the nun adds.) . . . Can you go home again? That is the tantalizing question raised by Walking With Ghosts - Sarah Lyall, The New York Times
This is a book about grief, loss, the secrets that we keep and the joys of creativity. It's also about dealing with addiction and the vertigo of fame. We always knew Gabriel Byrne was an astonishing actor but now we also know what an elegant, intelligent and dignified writer he is - Mariana Enríquez, author of Dangers of Smoking in Bed
Byrne is very honest and interspersed with all of the beautifully evoked sadness [in Walking With Ghosts] are very funny moments . . . you know he has a very good sense of humour but he probably wouldn’t admit it - Jane Smiley
In pared down prose both luminous and raw, Walking with Ghosts is about first things—parents, siblings, loves, heartbreaks, parts, failure, success, loss, but most of all it is a tender embrace of the past as Byrne discovers and accepts the truth of who he is in all his human struggle to be at peace with oneself and one’s imperfections. In a voice full of warmth, compassion, humor and wonder, Byrne steps into the role of writer with the same assurance, humility and intensity that he brings to his acting roles. More, this debut marks a welcome new voice that blends memory and imagination for an all-encompassing and wise memoir that reads like a novel - Vanessa Manko, author of The Un-American
It is at times a heartbreakingly tender excursion between the living and the dead. The actor is an artist of the written as well as the spoken word - Tommy Condren, Sunday Independent
A beautifully judged blend of sparkling anecdotes spliced with the darkest of memories - Sarah Halliwell, The Gloss Magazine
The diary of a poet who also happens to be a famous movie star - Monique Roffey
Actor Byrne channels his fellow countrymen and Ireland's literary masters - Beckett, Heaney, Joyce, Yeats - to create an exceptionally lyrical and expressive memoir about his childhood and early career . . . Bracingly revealing about his struggle with alcoholism, achingly passionate about the Ireland of his youth, and piercingly frank about his acting life, Byrne is a vivid, evocative, and sumptuously compelling memoirist - Booklist
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“Excellent 4.5☆ autobiography”
Well worth a read. Gabriel Byrne is very strong in the description of his Dublin childhood. The narrative jumps between his successful Hollywood film career and Byrne's early life. His recollections are always... More
“Beautiful memoir, handles tragic and sensitive topics with grace”
Beautifully and poetically written, I had to reread certain sentences as they were breathtakingly well written. Certain passages absolutely broke my heart and others had me in tears of laughter. Glorious and... More
“A joy to read”
This is a really beautifully written memoir. Rather than a traditional chronological approach focusing on the acting stage of his life, Byrne builds chapters around major influences in his life, both people and... More
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