Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

This Human Season

Rate this book
November 1979, the height of Northern Ireland’s Troubles. Kathleen Moran’s son Sean has just been transferred to the hypersecure H-block in Belfast’s notorious Maze prison, where he soon emerges as a young but impor­tant force in the extreme protest, known as the Blanket, that political prisoners are staging there. John Dunn is also newly arrived at the prison, having taken on the job of guard—a brutal but effective way to support a house and a girlfriend, the domestic dream.   In the weeks leading up to Christmas, no one’s dreams go untroubled. As rumors of a hunger strike begin to circulate, Louise Dean’s pitch-perfect novel places two parents, two sons, and two enemies on a collision course that ends in a surprising and deeply resonant climax.

374 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2005

24 people are currently reading
244 people want to read

About the author

Louise Dean

6 books55 followers
Louise is the founder of Thenovelry.com. The online creative writing courses recommended by the world's leading literary agencies with five-star reviews.

Louise Dean has won the Betty Trask Prize, Le Prince Maurice Prize, been nominated for The Guardian First Book Prize, and longlisted for the Booker Prize.  Her first book 'Becoming Strangers' was named one of The Observer's top four books of the year.

'Louise Dean's fearless, frank and darkly comic novels have brought a fresh colour and character to English fiction.' Boyd Tonkin, The Independent.


'Dean is an audacious arrival in British fiction.’ The Guardian.

'Dean writes with beautifully controlled clarity about family ties, social class, the generation gap and the vanished England of the past. She’s extremely funny, but also humane and moving.' The Times.

'Dean has a deliciously lucid and seemingly effortless style…’ Daily Mail.

Louise teaches novel writing and short stories and has spoken at Hay on Wye, Brisbane, Galle and Edinburgh Festivals.

She has appeared on BBC News, Radio 4, Woman's Hour with Jenni Murray and Mariella Frostrup amongst others.

Louise was educated at Cambridge University and has lived and worked in the USA and France.



Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
43 (16%)
4 stars
89 (34%)
3 stars
91 (35%)
2 stars
21 (8%)
1 star
11 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews
Profile Image for Helen Callaghan.
Author 13 books281 followers
August 14, 2018
I don't know what's been happening lately - I've had a load of barely started books on the go for the last few months while I've been working on the first draft of Find Me, and no energy to finish any. It's only now the draft is completed that I've been able to properly sink into them. And how much I've enjoyed them - it reminds me again that all books are a two-way street, not something you passively consume. You also have to bring your A-game to them, and not just the other way around.

This Human Season has had me gripped for days. It's a richly textured, beautifully told story based around the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Closed off army veteran John Dunn has taken a job in the Maze prison, formerly called Long Kesh, and Kathleen Moran's son Sean is part of the blanket protest with the other IRA prisoners in the months running up the first hunger strike.

There is a wealth of bleak sharp humour and warm but scratchy domestic detail as both live their lives and separate but interlinked family dramas while, outside, the threat of sectarian violence and growing dread draws ever nearer to home. There's a wonderful thread all the way through of how brutality begets brutality, breaking down all involved, and yet despite this humans can continue to love, hope, and attempt to build again.

It is not a particularly easy read in places - it doesn't shy away from the horrors of life in prison during the protests, or the lurking fear and intimidation of the prison officers taking place in the community, but it gave me a great deal to think about. In the gaps between being able to carry on reading, this book haunted my mind.

I'd recommend it to anyone interested in the Troubles (especially if, like me, they were a kid at the time and a lot of the context for the headlines went over your head), or if you are interested in great books in general.

Profile Image for Lisa.
3,787 reviews491 followers
August 15, 2018
I’ve only ever read one book set in Northern Ireland – but that was nothing like as confronting as this one. David Park’s The Light of Amsterdam (2012) is a comparatively recent book which makes no mention of the conflict known as the Troubles at all. This Human Season, by contrast is grounded in the Troubles. It tells the parallel stories of a mother whose 19-year-old son has just been sent to the notorious Maze Prison, and a man who has just started work there as a prison guard.
I am mindful that readers who have come to adulthood since the Good Friday Agreement in 1998 may not know much about this horrific conflict which claimed the lives of more than 3500 people. Events still in living memory are ‘history’ now, yet for people of my generation, deaths from the IRA bombing campaigns in Belfast and London were a regular item on the nightly news, in the way that Islamic terrorism is now.
Wikipedia provides this brief summary (lightly edited to remove links and footnotes):
The Troubles (Irish: Na Trioblóidí) was an ethno-nationalist conflict in Northern Ireland during the late 20th century. Also known internationally as the Northern Ireland conflict, and the Conflict in Ireland it is sometimes described as a “guerrilla war” or a “low-level war”. The conflict began in the late 1960s and is usually deemed to have ended with the Good Friday Agreement of 1998.] Although the Troubles primarily took place in Northern Ireland, at times the violence spilled over into parts of the Republic of Ireland, England, and mainland Europe.
The conflict was primarily political and nationalistic, fuelled by historical events. It also had an ethnic or sectarian dimension, although it was not a religious conflict. A key issue was the constitutional status of Northern Ireland. Unionists/loyalists, who were mostly Protestants, wanted Northern Ireland to remain within the United Kingdom. Irish nationalists/republicans, who were mostly Catholics, wanted Northern Ireland to leave the United Kingdom and join a united Ireland.

This Human Season takes place when the British army had been sent into Belfast to try to prevent violence between the two sides, but inevitably the soldiers became targets themselves. There had been a crackdown on nationalist sympathisers and hundreds of them had been arrested and were in the Maze prison. As part of a protest to have these prisoners deemed political prisoners rather than criminals (some of them guilty of murder and targeted assassinations), the prisoners began a gruesome campaign known as the Dirty Protest. (The BBC has videos here, but they are graphic, you have been warned). Inevitably prison guards became targets themselves as well.

To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2018/08/15/t...
Profile Image for Fadi Kharoufeh.
165 reviews13 followers
December 16, 2020
‘A person could kill someone they loved for something they loved better’

‘People need to be sad as much as they need to be happy’

This read was quite good and it has the christmas setting well into it. The problem it is a bit daunting reading it around Christmas, when it is cold, we have a pandemic and lockdown...it isn't a very cheerful read. The writing is exquisite but also difficult to follow at times. It is a book for the strong hearted. The historical part of it is extremely interesting and the way the prisons, brutality of the British police and treatment of the IRA prisoners was discusses and portrayed brilliantly. I loved the main characters John Donna and Kathleen , their family members but I could not connect a lot with some of the supporting characters, neighbours even police officers.

I rated 3 stars because:
1) The christmas atmosphere in daunting Belfast within a community that knew each other was superb.
2) The writing was probably hard but still enjoyed the irish phrases, and it was done extremely well - I enjoyed it.
3) The characters were deep and very human - extremely likeable and they could be as real as you get in the real life.

I took 2 stars off because:
1) As I mentioned above, this is sad story that happened in history for people in Ireland but reading git in this year's christmas made it extra hard.
2) The supporting characters were one dimensional - apart from the children. I wanted them to feel as good as sean, John, Kathleen, father Pearse.
Profile Image for Joan.
23 reviews
January 9, 2013
I will start on a slight negative for me which was the rigid alternating chapters of one being about Kathleen Moran's family including her son Sean who was in Long Kesh "on the blanket" and the next about John Dunn, ex-soldier come prison officer working in The Maze. I found that I was initially more interested in the story of Kathleen and her family and it was almost irritating to have to read about the prison officer's life. However I am glad I persevered as John Dunn's story developed well and by half way through I was absorbed with both peoples lives.

I loved how Louise Dean managed (through using speach by the characters) to show the humour and some of the reality of living through such times. The characters were not the most finely drawn I have come across but their language showed me who they were and helped me identify with them. I think the book is a family drama but one set in most extraordinary times where politics was indivisible from peoples lives and goes out of its way to try to show how different individuals managed to live their lives during this time. The people are not perfect and in a way each person tries to find a way to distract themselves, Kathleen's husband Sean with drink, Kathleen with her affairs and John Dunn with his stoic mans man attitude.

The climax (which I wont give away) was unfortunately for me guessable but to be honest this didn't spoil the emotional impact of the book.

Profile Image for Alex Csicsek.
78 reviews4 followers
March 12, 2011
1979 Belfast was a pervasively political place. Which makes it all the more curious that Dean's novel is the stuff of personal and human tragedy.

This Human Season is far too sophisticated to ignore the politics of its setting, but those politics are integrated in a wonderfully natural way that allow them to serve as an impetus without overshadowing the characters themselves. And this novel is very much about the characters. It tells the stories of two individuals who couldn't be more different: Kathleen Moran, a Catholic mother in West Belfast saddled by an unfulfilling marriage and a son on the blanket at Long Kesh, and John Dean, a former British Army soldier who settled in Belfast to take a job at the prison.

Both characters go about their lives as Christmas comes and goes in Northern Ireland. And while the book does paint an excellent portrait of the human side of the Troubles, its real strength is painting a portrait of the human side of life, especially the bonds between family, friends, and community. The reader is spurred on by a sense of impending tragedy foreshadowed by the violence that surrounds both characters, but the real purpose of the narrative is to spend a few weeks with Kathleen and John.

Not the greatest character sketches ever produced, but certainly worth a read.
Profile Image for Chrisiant.
362 reviews21 followers
September 10, 2007
I read this just after re-reading Belfast Diary by John Conroy, which I had originally read as a textbook in a college course on the History of Ireland.

The book is set in 1979, right in the thick of "The Troubles" period of Ireland, just before a round of hunger strikes by Catholic prisoners. Reading it just after a good historical context book worked really well, I think. The fiction fits right into the non-fiction framework set up in my head by Conroy's book, and little plot points or obscure references would click because of my earlier reading.

I felt like the switching back and forth between "sides" each chapter (between the Republican/Catholic/prisoner set of characters and the Unionist/Protestant/prison warden set of characters) was a little forced. It seemed like it might have served better in several places to continue with one storyline instead of bouncing back to a kind of unnecessary scene in the other storyline.

The ending, at least on the Protestant side of things, was way too predictable, and on the Catholic side it was a little too happy an ending for me. Generally though, I enjoyed the book and thought it was pretty well written.
Profile Image for Marisa.
72 reviews1 follower
June 9, 2013
This book was just ok. That's the only way I can describe it. None of the characters were terribly memorable and the mixing of the character's viewpoints, instead of enhancing the story only served to convolute matters and make none of the characters very likeable. It took me a good majority of the book to fully grasp the plot and the author's intent in writing this and the plot moved very very slowly. No major/imperative plot moments - just a lot of slice of life style writing. One of the principle characters doesn't survive (spoiler alert)but when I got to that part I only found myself sort of caring that he was dead. It was an interesting look at Ireland and Irish politics but as far as quality of plot and identifiable characters this isn't a fantastic book.
Profile Image for Rosemary.
1,273 reviews
July 31, 2009
Excellent story told of the Troubles in Northern Ireland in 1979-told by two points of view; a guard at the Maze prison and the mother of one of the prisoners. Their lives are so similar; bleak and sad with no other outcome except death.
Profile Image for Chuck.
531 reviews10 followers
December 27, 2011
The story started off strong but unfortunately I forced myself to finish it.
Profile Image for K.
140 reviews
May 29, 2013
Weird story with a horrible ending.
Profile Image for Melanie Garrett.
245 reviews30 followers
December 18, 2017
The characterisation and the evocation of time and place are nothing short of triumphant. THIS HUMAN SEASON reads like a love letter to the cadences of smoky Irish voices.
8 reviews2 followers
dnf
February 9, 2023
I am about 30% through with this book. I found it while searching for a self-help book on Libby...and I was not mentally prepared for the content. It is beautifully & sparsely written, and without a lot of context for the time period it covers, I found myself doing a lot of Googling to try to understand the plot and the characters. Putting it in DNF for now bc its just very emotionally draining and hard to read casually. But maybe one day I'll get the physical version and be able to read it w/ more ease.
107 reviews
August 10, 2018
Well-written novel set in a difficult period in the history of Northern Ireland. I was tempted to quit early on - it seemed likely that there was going to be violence associated with at least some of the characters in the book - but I'm glad I continued. The well-drawn characters, the flashes of humor, the insight into how people react to very trying circumstances made the book ultimately quite rewarding.
Profile Image for Marie.
15 reviews1 follower
December 27, 2019
I started reading this book, but I stopped in the first few pages. The author thinks that people say “Jesus, Joseph and Mary’ instead of Jesus Mary and Joseph. The language is irritating. I knew the Belfast of that time, I still know the people and the language and this was just too irritating to continue.
76 reviews1 follower
February 16, 2020
Horrific

How she managed to write with such knowledge and balance about these awful times is amazing. She brought the horror and humour together to keep this reader entranced. A first class writer whose other books I'll now seek out.
31 reviews
February 26, 2021
Due credit

Credit to the author for tackling a difficult subject, pulling it off incorporating very believable characters with authentic voices. Disappointed that main strands did not quite converge, and the peppering of commercial devices was an unnecessary evil.
Profile Image for Evanston Public  Library.
665 reviews67 followers
Read
January 30, 2009
Belfast, 1979, is the setting for Dean's second novel. It is told from the point of view of Kathleen Moran whose young son Sean is being held in the Maze prison's notorious H-block, and of John Dunn, a guard at the prison. Sean is taking part in the "dirty protest" that Irish Republican prisoners organized when they were denied the rights of political detainees. Dunn, retired from the British Army, has taken his job out of necessity rather than because of any strong convictions about the Troubles. The author shows great empathy for both points of view and injects the story with a surprising amount of humor. (Mary B., Reader's Services)
Profile Image for Judith.
1,675 reviews89 followers
November 2, 2008
I read this book because it is set in Belfast in 1979, during the hunger strikes, made famous by the death of Bobby Sands, in the Maze prison. I lived in Belfast during that year and I was naturally interested in how this book portrayed the hunger strikes and the people affected by them. The book has no heroes, nor anyone that I could find sympathy for, nor anyone that I could even vaguely like. In addition, even though the subject matter was fascinating, the narrative was boring and I just lost interest.
Profile Image for Faith.
196 reviews19 followers
Read
January 12, 2009
Ireland. 1979. 2 months before Christmas. The Northern Ireland Troubles. Kathleen with grown up son in prison and husband god knows where. John, prison guard who has finally found himself a girl (not Kathleen). "...both K and J will find themselves in impossible situations. Both will have to find a way when everything they love is in danger of being destroyed."

It was very hard to get into this book. Half away through I still wasn't engaged... Too many characters, too little happening. But it was worth finishing the book!
Profile Image for Georgia Gross.
21 reviews2 followers
September 8, 2007
This novel takes place in Ireland, December 1979, the height of "the troubles". It chronicles the worry of a mother whose son has recently been sent to jail and the life of a newly appointed prison guard. I am interested in doing more research on the IRA and then reading this book again when I have more than a mere cursory understanding. I have Armed Struggle:The History of the IRA, but I haven't read it yet.
Profile Image for Lauren.
1,597 reviews97 followers
March 15, 2011
Really interesting novel about Belfast in the late 1970s told from several pov - the mother of a prisoner, a British prison guard, the community priest. Very sympathetic to the human condition rather than one side or the other. One plotline went where I thought it would go, the other was a total and rather wonderful surprise.
Profile Image for Katy Brandes.
Author 3 books27 followers
August 10, 2011
Finally finished this book...it took a long time to get into it. The characters started to come to life about half-way through. You get to see both points of view with no bias, and it's a tragic story (albeit fictionalized) no matter which. Definitely a good read if you're interested in this history.
Profile Image for Matthew Stuart.
108 reviews2 followers
February 20, 2015
Other reviewers did not seem to like the characters in this book. Maybe it is hereditary, maybe genetics, but I thought they were very good. Good persons overwhelmed, understandingly so, by the situation. Picture yourself, one son in Maze prison the other on route. I found it realistic and tragic. A land of no winners.
Profile Image for GK.
417 reviews
April 2, 2008
A really moving and engrossing tale of two families on seemingly opposite sides of The Troubles. Excellently written and absolutely recommended.
25 reviews2 followers
Want to read
June 28, 2009
I didn't make to read this one yet, although I bought it a long time ago...
Profile Image for Debbie.
1,644 reviews12 followers
July 22, 2009
I think you might have to have an interest in the 'situation' in Northern Ireland to truly appreciate this book.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 36 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.