A pair of novellas, set over two pivotal summers in the lives of two young men from Belfast, recall the constraints of the place where they were born and the times in which they are living.
Summer on the Road
Itxe2x80x99s 1980 and in the last summer before his A levels Mark lands a job he didnxe2x80x99t even know he had applied for, sweeping streets for Belfast City Council. Called xe2x80x98binmanxe2x80x99 by his schoolfriends, xe2x80x98snootyxe2x80x99 by his workmates, he canxe2x80x99t imagine anything less like a holiday. Day by day, though, navigating bomb scares, punishing hangovers, broken television sets and a loving but chaotic home life, he begins to glimpse a path all his own, even if he canxe2x80x99t see yet where exactly it is going to lead.
Last Summer of the Shangri-Las
Three years earlier Gem has driven his mother to the brink. She packs him off to stay with his aunt in New York during the infernal heat of the summer of 1977. Itxe2x80x99s the summer too of disco, of punk, the summer of Sam, and Elvis dead on the bathroom floor. For Gem though it will forever after be the summer he met Vivien xe2x80x93 as rooted in the city as he is adrift; the summer he stumbled on Mary, Liz and Margie, three-quarters of the greatest New York group of all (and theyxe2x80x99d fight anyone who said otherwise); the summer he learned how to go home.
Capturing the innocence of adolescent boys, their passion, confusion and yearning, Two Summers is for anyone who has ever been young. xc2xa0