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  • Published: 7 March 2019
  • ISBN: 9781784163129
  • Imprint: Black Swan Ireland
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 304
  • RRP: $29.99

Silence Under A Stone



An achingly beautiful novel about a mother forced to choose between her God and her only son.

Sitting alone in her Dublin nursing home, Harriet Campbell reflects on a life that has become tainted by bitterness and regret. From a strictly Presbyterian community along the Irish border, at sixteen young Harriet is married off to Thomas, a respected church Elder but a cold, sober man twice her age. The birth of her son James, a bright boy destined for great things, brings joy and light to her life. But when he falls in love with a beautiful girl from the wrong faith, their relationship is torn apart.

Written in startlingly beautiful prose, Norma MacMaster’s Silence Under a Stone is an intimate, deeply moving story of love, faith and the pain of an irreconcilable heart.

  • Published: 7 March 2019
  • ISBN: 9781784163129
  • Imprint: Black Swan Ireland
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 304
  • RRP: $29.99

About the author

Norma MacMaster

Norma MacMaster was born and reared in County Cavan before continuing her studies in Derry, Dublin, Belfast and Montreal. She was a secondary school teacher and counsellor in Ireland and Canada and was ordained a minister of the Church of Ireland in 2004. A contributor to Sunday Miscellany on RTE Radio 1, she is the author of a memoir, Over My Shoulder. She and her late husband have one daughter. Norma lives by the sea in North County Dublin, and wrote Silence Under A Stone ‘a bit now and a bit then’, typing with two fingers in her attic. It is her first novel.

Praise for Silence Under A Stone

Epic . . . A stirring novel about redemption, and a way of living soon best forgotten

RTE Culture

Richly portrayed in tight, lucid prose

Sunday Independent

MacMaster's debut novel is bright with promise

RTE Guide

Lyrical

Irish Examiner

Remarkable . . . Timeless . . . Graceful

Irish Independent

An engrossing debut . . . not just an elegy for a lost world, it also helps explain the intransigence of traditional attitudes in the North and the border counties

The Phoenix