Mervyn Wall (1908-1997) was born in Dublin. He was educated in both Ireland and Germany, and obtained his B.A. from the National University of Ireland in 1928. After fourteen years in the Civil Service, he joined Radio Éireann as Programme Officer. In 1957 he became Secretary of the Arts Council of Ireland, retiring in 1975. Known during his lifetime as a broadcaster and critic, he is best remembered for his two satirical fantasies set in medieval Ireland, The Unfortunate Fursey (1946) and The Return of Fursey (1948).
"Wildly fantastic, intensely satirical, and wickedly comic." - The
Irish Times
"For anyone who doesn't know Fursey, this opportunity to do so
is not to be missed." - Dublin Book Review
"I love this thing - a very funny 1946 novel about an Irish monk
stumbling through a parade of supernatural adventures. If I wasn't
doing Hellboy I think I'd be very happy spending a couple years
drawing an adaptation of this." - Mike Mignola
"Irish novelists of the last century generally eschewed outright
fantasy, with the honourable exceptions of Flann O'Brien's wilder
flights of fancy, and the neglected work of comic genius that is
Mervyn Wall's The Unfortunate Fursey." - John Connolly
"The Fursey books are essentially freewheeling fantasy with
satirical understones . . . Wall writes with elegance and the
occasional poetic flourish; his world has its rules, but they are
not the rules, as we conceive them, of our modern world." -
Wormwood
"This is a book that should be far more widely cherished . . . an
extremely readable, entertaining and pertinent novel." - Dublin
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