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Prophet Song
Audible Audiobook
– Unabridged
Winner of the Booker Prize 2023
On a dark, wet evening in Dublin, scientist and mother of four Eilish Stack answers her front door to find the GNSB on her step. Two officers from Ireland’s newly formed secret police are here to interrogate her husband, a trade unionist.
Ireland is falling apart. The country is in the grip of a government turning towards tyranny and when her husband disappears, Eilish finds herself caught within the nightmare logic of a society that is quickly unravelling.
How far will she go to save her family? And what – or who – is she willing to leave behind?
Exhilarating, terrifying and propulsive, Prophet Song is a work of breathtaking originality, offering a devastating vision of a country at war and a deeply human portrait of a mother’s fight to hold her family together.
2023, Booker Prize, Winner
2023, An Post Irish Book Awards Novel of the Year, Short-listed
- Listening Length8 hours and 32 minutes
- Audible release dateDecember 7, 2023
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB0CPFL6DD4
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
| Listening Length | 8 hours and 32 minutes |
|---|---|
| Author | Paul Lynch |
| Narrator | Gerry O'Brien |
| Audible.com Release Date | December 07, 2023 |
| Publisher | Bolinda audio |
| Program Type | Audiobook |
| Version | Unabridged |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B0CPFL6DD4 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #5,625 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #19 in Political Fiction (Audible Books & Originals) #53 in Political Fiction (Books) #81 in Dystopian Science Fiction (Audible Books & Originals) |
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the realism evocative, haunting, and unflinching. They also say the content has powerful moments. Opinions are mixed on the pace, plot, and readability. Some find it heartwrenching, timely, and powerful, while others say it's a tad slow at times. Readers also differ on the plot, with some finding it believable and frightening, while other find it disturbing, disquieting, and tense.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the concept powerful, interesting, and enjoyable. They say the book has many lessons to be relearned, sorrows to be grieved, and fears to be faced. They also say it provides a window into current events and a warning for the future. Customers also appreciate the author's ability to pull them in and feel the despair and urgency.
"...The novel is not merely a cautionary tale, but a poignant exploration of individual resilience in the face of systemic oppression...." Read more
"...There are many lessons to be relearned; sorrows to be grieved; fears to be faced; and lives to be loved" Read more
"...Lynch’s hour-long talk was a triumph of hard-won wisdom and erudition, and at its conclusion, the audience rewarded him with enthusiastic and..." Read more
"...The subject matter and writing quirks ensure a challenging, thought-provoking experience." Read more
Customers find the book very realistic, heartbreaking, and lyrically written. They also appreciate the unique perspective and beautiful sentences. Readers also describe the book as apocalyptic, suspenseful, and dark.
"...He masterfully wields historical echoes and contemporary anxieties, fostering a sense of chilling plausibility within the dystopian framework...." Read more
"...The focus was on beautiful, unique sentences, instead of the raw, short, cutting reality of dictatorship and war...." Read more
"...It was also a pretty unique perspective for me. Most dystopian stories I've read are post-apocalyptic or set farther in the future...." Read more
"...The writer makes it all seem very real. In this case the setting is Ireland and I think this is its gift in a way...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the plot. Some find the dystopian novel jarring the heartstrings, while others say the premise is implausible and the chronology of events isn't particularly logical.
"...wields historical echoes and contemporary anxieties, fostering a sense of chilling plausibility within the dystopian framework...." Read more
"...The story is consistently tragic and hopeless. While it is beautiful prose it's composed as a run on with unusual sentence/ paragraph structure...." Read more
"Depressing and frightening and nonetheless worth reading...." Read more
"...However, it quickly immerses you in the narrative, intensifying the sense of loss and bewilderment...." Read more
Customers find the book eloquent, easy to read, and low-key. However, some customers say the author complicates the reading by not putting dialog in. They also complain about the strained word choices, repetition, and lack of clear distinctions between characters. They say the dialogue is a mess, with no quotes or clear breaks between characters, making it difficult to follow.
"...When I started, I knew that the eloquent writing, the style of writing, and the subject demanded more of my time and more of my emotional..." Read more
"...However, the lack of clear distinctions between characters can occasionally impede narrative flow...." Read more
"A phenomenal novel, notable both for its writing and timely message: fascism is a real and dangerous threat to modern democracies...." Read more
"...of Lynch's style of refusing to use paragraphs which I found simply pretentious and irritating." Read more
Customers are mixed about the pace of the book. Some find it heartwrenching, powerful, and fast-paced, while others say it's a tad slow at times.
"A phenomenal novel, notable both for its writing and timely message: fascism is a real and dangerous threat to modern democracies...." Read more
"You might struggle with this book. It’ll be boring at times, too slow at times, will feel like rambling vague prose sometimes, then it will punch..." Read more
"Very good and a timely read. What would it be like to live under a fascist regime?It was a page turner for me...." Read more
"The story is gripping and timely, and the author manages to touch on questions, issues, and catastrophic and real threats that exist and manifest..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the characterization in the book. Some find the characters detailed and well-developed, while others say they lack development and are flat.
"...There is a lot of detailed setup and character development, but I was most interested in the main plot’s story arc: this woman living without her..." Read more
"...seems most inexcusable in a book like this, is the almost complete lack of character development...." Read more
"...Nonetheless, the characters are well-developed and likeable. A good read overall." Read more
"The writing is sometimes overwrought and the main character's long solipsistic monologues dull. The progression of the plot is very uneven...." Read more
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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The novel is not merely a cautionary tale, but a poignant exploration of individual resilience in the face of systemic oppression. While Lynch's prose is poetic and evocative, his critique of authoritarianism remains razor-sharp. He masterfully wields historical echoes and contemporary anxieties, fostering a sense of chilling plausibility within the dystopian framework.
However, the lack of clear distinctions between characters can occasionally impede narrative flow. Additionally, the relentless bleakness, while impactful, might leave some readers yearning for glimmers of hope.
Despite these minor quibbles, "Prophet Song" remains a powerful and unsettling read. Its exploration of familial bonds, individual agency, and the fragility of democracy resonates deeply, making it a must-read for those seeking a thought-provoking and emotionally charged literary experience.
Please enjoy this storytelling; give yourself the time and space for it. There are many lessons to be relearned; sorrows to be grieved; fears to be faced; and lives to be loved
The book-signing I attended was preceded by an hour-long interview with Lynch, who in the process gave a kind of master class in writing fiction, while also unobtrusively showing off his wide reading in fiction, past and present.
The interviewer began by asking Lynch how it was that he, Lynch, wrote a novel about America. The question drew a laugh from the audience, but Lynch responded that he had been promoting the book in India just the previous week, and a woman there had said to him, “You’ve told our story.”
At this point, Lynch reflected briefly on how hectic his life had been since winning the Booker Prize—80 interviews. He admitted that all of his recent travels had exhausted him, saying that “my internal clock is like a Dali timepiece.”
When asked whether Prophet Song was a dystopian novel, Lynch demurred. Lynch felt that dystopian novels basically deliver a message of grievance, while “fiction is about grief, not grievance.” He continued that “dystopian fiction seems a bit paper-maché,” and in general he is skeptical of political novels. He said that fiction needs rather to show complexity, and to view things, not through one lens, but rather through multiple lenses.
Lynch admitted that one can interpret Prophet Song from a political perspective, but then “a good book allows for multiple interpretations.” He said that “you are conditioned by democracy to assume that nothing will change,” but his story examines the lives of people upended by a fascist takeover. About his main character, Eilish (“aye-lish”) Stark, he said: “she has been lifted off her feet by a riptide.”
In this spirit, Lynch sees himself following in the footsteps of the great writers of the past, insofar as his task is to “see what the human condition is while telling stories about human beings.” Furthermore, he thinks that the “human condition needs to be interpreted anew by each generation.”
As for the totalitarian regime portrayed in Prophet Song and the multiple human tragedies that it causes, Lynch said that “the end of the world is always happening somewhere.” He referenced Gaza and the Ukraine. Lynch’s own story is intended to “map the effects of circumstances on the individual characters,” and “tyranny is transmitted into the psychology of the characters.” He advocates realism as “important to root the reader in the present moment,” and “to reach up and get hold of reality, and then to put it on the page.”
Lynch realizes that Prophet Song asks a lot of the reader in following the un-raveling of a family, as well as the un-raveling of a state, because “the book hurts you.” By the same token, however, Lynch described the act of writing this story as descending into the 8th or 9th level of Dante’s Inferno. Still, he hoped that the ending created empathy in the readers.
There were questions about Lynch’s dense prose style, in which long, long sentences contain description and dialogue with little of the punctuation with which these items are customarily treated. There are also no paragraphs, only sections of a few pages each. Lynch stated that he did not begin with any certain style in mind with which he would write the novel, but rather the style flowed organically from the story he was trying to tell.
Lynch described his point-of-view in the novel as 3rd-person, limited omniscient narrator, meaning that the narrator knows only as much as the character. He described his approach to fiction as trying to find an alignment between his interests or obsessions and the story he wants to tell. He said also: “I’m not a mainstream writer. I’ve always played at the edge of the court.”
Lynch’s hour-long talk was a triumph of hard-won wisdom and erudition, and at its conclusion, the audience rewarded him with enthusiastic and sustained applause.
After the interview, Lynch faced a line of autograph-seekers stretching to the back of the room. When it was my turn, he met me with friendly eye contact and personalized his inscription as I requested. Despite being among the very select few writers who ever win a Booker Prize, Paul Lynch was approachable and kind, when one might have expected the exact opposite from a world-class writer.
Top reviews from other countries
Everybody should read it.
Even if there' s no dialogue punctuation, it' s easy to read.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 20, 2024


















