blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: Ordinary Saints – Diamond Ni Mhaoileoin

Can you imagine it? Can you imagine me there in the front row in Saint Peter’s Square? The lesbian sister of a literal saint.

Brought up in a devout household in Ireland, Jay is now living in London with her girlfriend, determined to live day to day and not think too much about either the future or the past. But when she learns that her beloved older brother, who died in a terrible accident, may be made into a Catholic saint, she realises she must at last confront her family, her childhood and herself . . .

Inspired by the author’s own devout upbringing, Ordinary Saints is a brilliant debut novel from a fresh, exciting new voice which asks – who gets to decide how we are remembered – and who we will become?

Niamh Ní Mhaoileoin was the winner of the inaugural PFD Queer Fiction Prize and was also shortlisted for the Women’s Prize Trust Discoveries Prize in 2022. Her début literary novel Ordinary Saints was shortlisted for the 2025 Waterstones Debut Fiction Prize.

‘Inspired by my own upbringing in a devout family, Ordinary Saints asks how we, particularly as queer people, can reconcile ourselves with the beliefs, communities and selves we’ve had to leave behind. The premise is also based on real events. In October 2020, I read about the beatification of Carlo Acutis, an Italian teenager who is expected to become the first millennial saint. I couldn’t stop thinking about his family and how the cause for canonisation, on top of the grief of losing a son or brother, would affect them. This became the instigating question of my novel and my protagonist ‘the emigrant lesbian sister of a literal saint’ appeared soon afterwards.’ Niamh Ní Mhaoileoin, 2024

My thoughts: This book has an excellent opening line, and is really interesting and a bit funny. Or maybe that’s just me. Jay’s older brother died young in a terrible accident, he was training to be a priest. Jay was a teenager.

Now, thirteen years later, her dad calls and says he might be beatified as a saint. Unbeknownst to her, her parents have been helping to compile proof that he has been responsible for miracles after his death.

Jay is at a loss as to how to deal with this utterly bizarre thing. She’s not much of a Catholic these days, and she cannot get behind the campaign to turn her brother into a saint. She is forced to revisit and examine her relationship with him, and with her parents.

It’s a really interesting premise and while I was raised going to church, the Church of England doesn’t make saints, so this whole concept is mind boggling. The idea that in the 21st century anyone can imagine that there are new saints to be made is just, well, bewildering.

I really enjoyed this book, I empathised with Jay, struggling to reconcile the brother she remembers with the version being presented by the church, worthy of sainthood. The complicated nature of grief, memory and family relationships are all laid bare and Jay has to try to work out whether she can really believe that her brother, someone she isn’t sure she really knew, could really be perfect.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in this blog tour, but all opinions remain my own.

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