Ordinary Saints
Ordinary Saints is a powerful contemporary literary debut that explores the collision between faith, family, identity, and grief in modern Irish life. When Jay, a queer Irish woman living in London, learns that her estranged family is pursuing the canonisation of her late brother, she is forced back into a world she tried to leave behind—one shaped by strict Catholic beliefs, unspoken trauma, and deep emotional fracture.
Raised in a devout household in Ireland, Jay has spent years distancing herself from her upbringing and the expectations that came with it. But the suggestion that her brother—remembered differently by everyone who knew him—may become a Catholic saint reopens old wounds and unsettled questions about memory, truth, and legacy.
As Jay is drawn back into contact with her family, she must confront the tension between who her brother really was and the idealised version being constructed around him. At the same time, she is forced to reckon with her own place within a faith and culture that struggle to accept her identity.
Inspired in part by real-life canonisation processes within the Catholic Church, Ordinary Saints is a deeply moving exploration of queer identity, sibling relationships, religious authority, and the stories families tell to survive loss. It asks difficult questions about who gets to define a life after death—and what happens when truth and belief no longer align.
Intimate, thought-provoking, and emotionally resonant, this novel is a striking meditation on grief, belonging, and the quiet rebellions that shape who we become.
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