7.8 /10 1 Votes7.8
Country United Kingdom Media type Print (Softcover) Page count 275 | 3.9/5 Goodreads Language English Publisher Harper Collins Originally published 6 December 1999 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Publication date 6 December 1999 (1999-12-06) Genres Crime Fiction, Black comedy Similar Colin Bateman books, Dan Starkey novels books |
Turbulent Priests is the third novel of the Dan Starkey series by Northern Irish author, Colin Bateman, released on 6 December 1999 through Harper Collins. Bateman's usage of Rathlin Island (which he renamed "Wrathlin Island" in the novel) as the books setting led to Bateman being invited to unveil a "Writer's Chair", commemorating writers of all origin and genre.
Contents
Plot
The plot of this novel is based on Wrathlin Island, a small island north of mainland Ireland. Dan Starkey has been sent by Cardinal Daley, the Primate of All Ireland, to investigate reports that the Messiah has returned in the shape of a young girl, Christine, about to start school. Starkey has his wife Patricia and illegitimate child "Little Stevie" join him as he investigates the tiny dry community and meets considerable resistance from the defensive residents.
Reception
The novel received fairly little coverage though was well received.
Writing for The Herald, Allan Laing praised the novels "black-as-two-in-the-morning humour and the high body count", naming these as two Bateman trademarks. In another review for The Herald, Dawn Kofie calls the novel "more than just a straightforward thriller", stating that it "combines the mundane and the bizarre with mordant humour". She goes on to say that "despite its unlikely premise, the book is an engaging, swiftly paced fusion of murder, sex, and religious fundamentalism, loaded with wry one-liners". Isobel Montgomery, reviewing for The Guardian, stated that "Bateman is an engaging comic writer who has created another snappy adventure for Starkey".