Star of the Sea | |
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Author(s) | Joseph O'Connor |
Country | Ireland |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Historical |
Publisher | Random House |
Publication date | 1 January 2004 |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 410pp (432 including prologue) |
ISBN | ISBN 0-099-46962-6 (first edition, paperback) |
OCLC Number | 53123829 |
Star of the Sea is an historical novel by the Irish writer Joseph O'Connor published in 2004. The novel is set in 1847 against the backdrop of the Irish famine.
The "Star of the Sea" of the title is a famine ship, making the journey from Ireland to New York. Aboard are hundreds of refugees, most of them with humble and desperate backgrounds. Key protagonists are David Merridith Lord Kingscourt, his wife Laura, their servant Mary, the ship's captain Josias Lockwood, a friendless Irishman named Pius Mulvey, and American journalist Grantley Dixon.
The narrative of the novel follows multiple threads interwoven by the journalist character Dixon from documents such as diaries and letters, or from conversations/interviews with some of the principal characters or their relatives/descendants. The narrative partly follows the chronological course of the voyage, and for the intermediate or interposed parts consists of the meshed-in background lives of some of the emigrants & their relatives before they left Ireland (or England, or even after they arrived in the US). The novel departs from the usual formula of a murder mystery in that readers are vaguely informed of the identity of the murderer and the victim early in the novel, but the murder does not take place until the closing pages of the novel, and murder does not carry the full idea or sense of the killing.
As the writer was clearly aware in choosing the name, the term "Star of the Sea" has deep roots in Catholic tradition. Our Lady, Star of the Sea - a translation of the Latin Stella Maris - is the Blessed Virgin Mary in her aspect as a guide and protector to those who work or travel on the sea and under which title she is venerated in many Catholic seaside communities. Indeed, in Dutch and other translations the book was given the title "Stella Maris".
In 2008, London band Silvery released the song 'Star Of The Sea' on their debut album 'Thunderer & Excelsior' on Blow Up Records, loosely following the narrative of the book.
"The Star of the Sea" became an International No.1 Bestseller, selling over 800,000 copies in a year.[1]
Star of the Sea has collected many awards and shortlistings:[1]