ORNA ROSS

Historical Fiction

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NOVEL: Blue Mercy

£5.99£25.00

Mercy Mulcahy has been accused of a crime that has haunted her to the end of her days. Was it a mercy killing… or something more sinister? Now she must unveil her never-told story…and somehow get her daughter, Star, to listen.

Will you side with mother...or daughter?

When Mercy Mulcahy was 40 years old, she was accused of killing her elderly and tyrannical father. Now, as she faces her final chapter, she unveils the untold story of what really happened on that fateful Christmas Eve.

And why her own daughter stands in defiance against her.

The tragic and beautiful Mercy has devoted her life to protecting Star, whose contempt for her mother is as painful as it is inexplicable.

What is Mercy hiding? Was her father's death, as many believe, an assisted suicide? 

Or something even more sinister?

In this book, nothing is what it seems on the surface, and everywhere there are emotional twists and surprises.

Set in Ireland and California, Blue Mercy is a compelling family mystery, a lyrical, page-turning story of love, loss, betrayal... and the ultimate sacrifice. 

Praise for Orna Ross and Blue Mercy 

"A lyrical, gripping, and heartbreakingly beautiful tale of love, loss, and the ever-present possibility of redemption." — WE Magazine for Women 

“Wild… gamey. John McGahern meets Maeve Binchy.” – Irish Independent

12 reviews for NOVEL: Blue Mercy

  1. J F Penn

    This is literary fiction with a mystery at its heart. Mercy Mulcahy’s father asks her to help him die when he is already dying a painful death. He just wants it over with. Assisted dying is a cause that needs highlighting – our sick animals can die peacefully in the arms of those who love them, but not our sick people. But in Ireland, as in the rest of the world, this is considered murder and she is accused of it, standing trial and watched by her daughter and lover.

    But this is not the main thrust of the book, and Ross doesn’t make this easy reading. For this is a tale of family dysfunction, of men and women, of mothers and daughters, love, hate and duty. You will find yourself examining your own relationships, and questioning what you would do, what you would give up for the ones you love. Highly recommended.

    See original review on Amazon.com

  2. Susanne

    What a beautifully written story. The story of Mercy and her relationship with her angry daughter, Star, who she loves more than anything in the world. Her feelings for Zach,the man she was meant to be with, is beautifully described and mesmerising, as is her relationship with her old father. It is set both in Ireland and California and the descriptions of both are spot on. Without giving any of the plot away, I’ve just finished the book and is left reeling at the end. Literary fiction at its best.

    See original review on Amazon.com

  3. Elaine G

    I finished this book about two weeks ago but haven’t reviewed it until now because it really was one of those reads that I had to distance myself from to comment on objectively, because first impressions were that I hated it, although with the benefit of time, it wasn’t the book that I hated, it was the main character, Mercy, and even that may have been a little unfair on her.

    There are a number of clever twists and turns along the road, and the ending itself is a bit of a shocker indeed. To sum up, it was a very good story which was extremely thought provoking on a number of levels and if my feelings went off on a tangent that the author didn’t intend, then that is my bad!

    I think this would be a good choice for a book club – having spoken to someone else who has read the book, we found that I hated Mercy, and she hated Star – so I am sure it would provoke some very interesting discussions indeed!

    See original review on Amazon.com

  4. Tom Evans

    Clever, clever, clever. There’s not many fiction books I’ve read where I just had to read the first few chapters again to really understand the book. I remember having to replay bits of Sixth Sense in a similar way to check on Bruce Willis.

    The intertwined timelines and interweaved lives of the protagonists make this book such a joy to read. It’s a modern day masterpiece and deserves a wide readership.

    To explain any of the plot would be giving to much away. Read it, get absorbed by the rich tapestry the author has created with so much finesse, insight and joie de vivre. I am looking forward to reading more of Orna’s work now.

    See original review on Amazon.com

  5. Jane

    A beautifully-written story which draws you in straightaway to Mercy’s world and her early life in Ireland which she is trying to escape from. Twists keep you guessing right to the end. A very enjoyable and interesting read.

    See original review on Amazon.com

  6. Jodie Downes

    Though the subject can be quite hard going at times, it was easy to read quickly and I was desperate to figure it out, which I didn’t. At first I wasn’t entirely sure I was enjoying it, but the last 40% of it, I devoured, unable to put it down.

    Told from mother and daughters point of view, there is a bit of repetition, but the insight it brings makes it worthwhile. A typical teenage American girl clashing with a hippie at heart mother who wants her daughter to be happy more than anything. The intertwining of their lives more unimaginable than you could think, even when it’s already there before you realise.

    I was surprised by how much I actually came to like this book. Perseverance is the key.

    See original review on Amazon.com

  7. Karen P. Inglis

    I was tempted to give Blue Mercy four stars owing to feeling unnecessarily frustrated at times by the jumps around in time (the confusion arising for me from chapters being named as dates, at least two of which included the number ‘8’– I’ve never been great with numbers!) I also found that I had to go back and re-read the opening few pages several times to work out who was who! However *don’t let this put you off*. The quality of the writing is breathtaking, and Ross tackles hugely difficult themes and inner conflicts balancing brutal honesty with lyrical sensitivity – the vividness of her writing taking you deep into her characters’ psyches. The result, in my view, is a book that sits up there with the very best in literary fiction. I won’t repeat the basic plot – the other reviews here do that admirably. Highly recommended.

    (For the record Hilary Mantel drove me mad with her unhelpful use of ‘He’ in Wolf Hall — but I still rate that 5 Stars, and Ross deserves no less!)

    See original review on Amazon.com

  8. Celine Naughton

    It’s 6.30 in the morning and I’ve just finished reading Blue Mercy by Orna Ross. I started a few weeks ago and quickly realised I had before me not a little snack of a story but a feast, and a five-star one at that, cooked by the most talented chef you can imagine. And like an exquisite plate of food, I didn’t want to scarf it down all at once, so I was disciplined at first, savouring the descriptions so many pages at a time, gradually getting to know the characters Orna Ross draws so precisely I could see their faces, watch how they moved, hear the sound of their voices…
    I loved the way the plot unfolded, the pace of it, the small observations (Exactly, Orna: what kind of sadist would name a prison Mount Joy?) and above all, the storytelling. This is a thumping good yarn and utterly moreish, so the more I read the harder it got to stop and digest, and then about half way through the main course arrived and all my decorum disappeared. No way was anybody taking this plate away from me until I’d devoured every last word. So I stayed up all night, delighting in the twists and turns (especially the big one – I truly never saw that coming!) and when the end arrived I was so satisfied I thought I’d go for a lie-down, but then came dessert… Mmm, scrumptious. I scoffed the lot.
    Absolutely first class – thank you, Orna Ross. I’ll definitely be back for more.

    See original review on Amazon.com

  9. John and Dianne

    Beautifully written, thoroughly entertaining and captivating. I enjoyed every single page. A highly recommended 5 star read.

    See original review on Amazon.com

  10. Cathy Strong

    Gut wrenching story of a mother and her daughter and all that goes along with it. Whether you see the side from the mothers perspective or that of the daughter this book will hold you in its beautifully heartfelt prose to the very last page. I cannot stop crying for all the emotions this story brought to mind in me. I only wish that it never had to end.

  11. Mary Flora

    Blue Mercy, a story within a story.
    A mother’s unconditional love and sacrifice for a daughter who despises her.
    A woman’s struggle to survive against all odds. The highs, the lows; the twists and turns; the hopes and despairs, Blue Mercy has it all.
    Orna ross is a gifted story teller. Her descriptive phrases bring authenticity to the characters, environment and plot.
    A fast paced story which carried me forward in anticipation of what would happen at the end of each chapter. It was unputdownable! I read it within two days and I cried real tears. A great read. Highly recommended.

  12. Jamie Crawford

    Blue Mercy is Irish slang for an act of mercy with injurious consequences—or the opposite, an act of revenge that turns out to be a mercy. Orna Ross’s novel is well named: a story of paradoxes, polarities and, later on in the book, some extraordinary plot twists.

    There is much to enjoy in this ambitious exploration of the ways in which close relationships form, develop and fall apart. The book has its fair share of heartache but also enough wisdom and variety to stop it becoming mawkish or dour (most of the time).

    It will appeal especially to readers interested in unconventional choices and alternative lifestyles. The story follows Mercy, who leaves her native Ireland for beatnik America, only to find the woundedness of her background bedevilling new relationships and family. Her plight as a single mother with a troubled daughter, together with her quests for creative fulfilment and love, are movingly depicted.

    The novel features multiple viewpoints and a back-and-forth timeline, which took me a while to get used to. One challenging aspect of the story is that most of it is told via Mercy’s posthumous memoir, as handed down to its reluctant recipient, daughter Star. Their complex parent-child bond is central to the story. Yet while Star’s own take on the relationship bookends the memoir, her version of events is largely absent from the body of the book. This lacuna creates an unresolved tension, such that even in the wistful closing movements of the book, I found I was still judging Star through her mother’s words—and troubled at finding her deeply unsympathetic without having heard her side of the story. I’m guessing this is deliberate: the author wants to keep the reader guessing and the story true to a world in which all the loose ends are rarely tied up.

    Orna Ross is good on joy, sensuality and friendship (and I think the book could have benefitted from a little more exploration of this side of things, but see below!) The main love interest, for example, is beautifully if concisely realised: in Zach we find a subtle, enigmatic, dignified male character (whose mantra, ‘Bow to the present!’ has stayed with me) to complement the monstrous men—tyrannical father, feckless husband, creepy therapist, all of them deftly drawn—that crop up through the book. (Further oppositions occurs in Blue Mercy’s Ireland: the beauty of its landscape against the dolorous climate; the visionary uplift of its poetry against the claustrophobia of village life.)

    I accessed Blue Mercy as an audiobook, and I found it a compelling listen. Adena Cahill, the audiobook narrator, has a strong voice and does characters and dialogue very well. However, I found her reading did not do complete justice to the text. Her default tone came across as downbeat and even gloomy. Despite the amount of painful material in the book, there were many tender moments, lyrical passages and flashes of humour whose leavening magic was not given its full head by her narration. For me, that made the story less balanced and seasoned than it might otherwise have been. (I couldn’t help wondering how it would have sounded read by the author. Orna Ross is a prolific podcaster, with a lovely warm voice. Perhaps, as an Irish woman, she feared being over-identified with Mercy, the book’s dominant first-person protagonist.)

    All of which has left me curious to revisit Blue Mercy (in print). And there aren’t so many books, even among ones I like, I’d say that about.

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