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This Cruel Station Short Fiction by Martin Malone published by Doire Press
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Subtotal: 13,99
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1
Subtotal: 13,99
This Cruel Station Short Fiction by Martin Malone published by Doire Press
1 × 13,99
Subtotal: 13,99

Free shipping in Ireland over €25. Free worldwide shipping on orders over €50

Martin Malone

Short Fiction Writter Martin Malone

Biography

MARTIN MALONE is the author of seven novels, a memoir, two short story collections and several radio plays. His first novel Us won the John B Keane/Sunday Independent Literature Award and was shortlisted for the Kerry Ingredients Irish Fiction Award. His second novel After Kafra was optioned by and scripted for RTE TV. The Broken Cedar was nominated for the IMPAC Award and shortlisted for an Irish Fiction Award. His short stories have been widely broadcast and published, and have won national competitions, including ‘Valley of the Peacock Angel’, which was nominated for the 2012 Sunday Times EFG Short Story Prize and published in The Sunday Times. He is a former soldier with six tours of duty to Lebanon and Iraq.

Genre: Fiction
Number of publications: 1

‘This Cruel Station’ is a compellingly acute chronicle of history's sly, inexorable requisitions; these surgically precise but essentially humane observations represent a collection of stories as strong as you are likely to read all year.

— Patrick McCabe

Sample Work

Extract from 'Numbers'

‘Open ranks!... Close ranks!... About turn!... Slow march!’

God, if he doesn’t stop soon and give us a fag break, I’m going to drop. As sure as Hell is full, I’m going to drop.

The platoon wheels in a column past a line of beech saplings on a verge of grass that’s peppered with beads of sheep dirt. Sometimes we march on such dirt in the parade square and the smell gets high into our skulls. It takes a toothbrush to clean it from the wedges in the thick soles of our army boots.

He usually brings us to a halt when the church clock reaches midday and gives us a five-minute break. Not today, though. Someone whispers that he must have rowed with his missus last night, and didn’t get his hole. Stroppy head on him, says another. Others say other things that are about as far removed from kind as is possible.

He pivots on the square, a full ninety-degree turn on his right heel. Head erect. Autumn sunlight catches his cap badge. Glints gold as though fingered by Midas. A wind sweeps across the barrack square, pitching his orders high and low, bringing the fragrance of burning leaves to our nostrils. I’m grateful to the lad who’s burning the leaves. At this stage, any sort of smoke in my lungs will do.

‘Left!... Right!... Left!... Right! He roars, increasing the tempo of our cadence. Then he springs into Irish, ‘Clé! Deas! Clé! His barrel-chested voice booms. ‘Heads erect! Swing those arms close to your side! Keep your thumbs down! You’re not hitch-hiking! Stad! Not a move! Steady!’

Then he turns us to the right and tells us to fall out.

Fag break. Succour at last. The fag, a John Player, warms my lungs, caresses my nerves. A fag is a life jacket. There’ll only be time for a couple of drags, snatched puffs. Most of the platoon are non-smokers. There are just a few diehards like myself. Comfort smokers, the foot-drill instructor says. Although we have other names for him, his real name is Paul Morris—Sergeant Paul Morris. Initials PM, for Pre-Menstrual, which one of our female recruits said was sexist, but in this case she would let it go.

He’s right about the smokes, though. Cigarettes keep my nerves from tumbling over the edge. Since I joined the army, I’ve begun to eat them. I looked at myself in the mirror one morning, as I shaved, and caught the reek of my breath. I decided to quit, but then on the square the Sergeant rolled me over, saying I had dust on my beret—not army issue dust either, so it shouldn’t be fucking there! Loose threads on my trousers. My boots weren’t up to scratch. By the time he had run through me, I was gasping for a smoke.

‘Bull them!’ he had said about my boots. ‘Do you know what I mean by “bull them”?’

‘Yes, Sarge.’

‘Sarge? Sarge...? I’m not your friend. Do I look like I’m your friend?’

‘No, Sergeant!’

‘Get those boots sorted—I want to see my face in your toecaps from here-on-in.’

Martin Malone on The Reading Room

Books

This Cruel Station
This Cruel Station Short Fiction by Martin Malone published by Doire Press
ISBN: 978-1-907682-49-0 | Pages: 144 | Published: 2017 The stories in This Cruel Station explore what it is like to be Irish — and new Irish — in today’s society. Inspired by his observations and interactions with recently-arrived refugees from Syria and Iraq (where Martin served for one of his six tours of duty with the UN in the region), and of his fellow Irish, Malone has created a series of authentic and evocative voices that are both brave and daring, yet fearful.
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