
His fiction has been published in over 40 languages and has appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly, GQ, Paris Review and other places. “Let the Great World Spin” won the National Book Award in 2009. His other books include "TransAtlantic," "Let the Great World Spin," "This Side of Brightness,""Dancer" and “Zoli,” all of which were international best-sellers.

McCann reminds us that life is hard, and it is a wonder, and there is hope.Colum McCann is the author of three collections of short stories and six novels, including "Apeirogon," due to be published in Spring 2020. (Describing Lily’s first view of America: “New York appeared like a cough of blood.”) The finale is a melancholy set piece that ties it all together-an unopened letter, “passed from daughter to daughter, and through a succession of lives,” becomes the book’s mysterious token, an emblem of a world grown smaller. At times, it reads like poetry, or a dream. The language is lush, urgent, chiseled and precise sometimes languid, sometimes kinetic.

McCann then loops back to 1863 to launch the saga of the women we’ve briefly met throughout Book One, beginning with Irish housemaid Lily Duggan, whose bold escape from her troubled homeland cracks open the world for her daughter and granddaughter. The book begins with three transatlantic crossings, each a novella within a novel: Frederick Douglas’s 1845 visit to Ireland the 1919 flight of British aviators Alcock and Brown and former US senator George Mitchell’s 1998 attempt to mediate peace in Northern Ireland. An Amazon Best Book of the Month, June 2013: McCann’s stunning sixth novel is a brilliant tribute to his loamy, lyrical and complicated Irish homeland, and an ode to the ties that, across time and space, bind Ireland and America.
