Book review: ‘The Wonder’ by Emma Donoghue

There is a film adaptation, but read the book first: you wonโ€™t be able to put this page-turner down until the very end!


An English nurse gets a curious invitation to spend several weeks in a remote Irish village. Her one and only task is to monitor an 11 year-old girl who allegedly hasnโ€™t eaten anything in four months. Having worked under Florence Nightingale during the Crimean War, the nurse – Lib Wright – is a highly experienced and very rational person, but still unprepared for what she is about to witness. The child claims to live solely on โ€˜mannaโ€™ from heaven, as she describes it, and thereโ€™s nothing to disprove her supernatural claims. 

Is this a genuine miracle resembling those of some of the medieval female mystics, or an elaborate hoax?

Emma Donoghueโ€™s novel The Wonder paints the image of post-famine rural Ireland of the 1850s as a desolate, desperately poor and backward country, ruled by superstition and folk Catholicism. This serves as more than a fitting background to this psychodrama in which the wider national disaster translates into messed up family dynamics and a morbidly distorted sense of religiosity. It is not a flattering portrayal of Ireland, nor of the Catholic Church; least of all of the โ€˜traditional familyโ€™ as the locus of oppression and trauma.

While dealing with extremely difficult and upsetting subjects, the author doesnโ€™t succumb to cheap thrills of overly graphic descriptions. The novel is a suspense story more than anything else: although the plot is somewhat predictable, the eerie atmosphere of the miracle girlโ€™s home is sustained throughout. 

Not having seen the film adaptation yet, I can only hope it did justice to the strong gothic vibe of the book.


โ€˜The Wonderโ€™ by Emma Donoghue was first published by Little, Brown and Company in September 2016; 304 pp.


Emma Donoghueโ€™s talk about the women who inspired The Wonder

Is The Wonder based on a true story?


Discover more from grammaticus

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

3 Replies to “Book review: ‘The Wonder’ by Emma Donoghue”

Leave a reply to queenhelana Cancel reply