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Finding myself through murder

at Greenbelt 2008: Rising Sun

Andrew Nugent

Finding myself through murder

Having started writing murder mysteries in Africa at the age of 60, Andrew felt at first as if he was just being escapist. Find out how he actually became present to himself in a new way.

Former trial lawyer Andrew Nugent was called to the bar before he was called to the monastery and has travelled from being novice-master to master of crime fiction. In 1961 he became a Benedictine monk at Glenstal Abbey, going on to study theology at Strasbourg from 1964–68, ending with a Master’s degree (and the Student Revolution – not his sole responsibility). Currently Prior of Glenstal Abbey, Andrew has spent nine years in a monastery in Nigeria. He spends a month every summer in a parish in the States and has a great deal of experience as a counsellor and retreat leader. His first novel, The Four Courts Murder, was published by Headline in 2005, followed a year later by Second Burial for a Black Prince, which centres around the death of a young Nigerian immigrant in Ireland. He has also written The Slow-Release Miracle, “my personal synthesis: what I think the spiritual life is all about”, published jointly by Paulist Press (N.J.) and Columba Press (Dublin).

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“Nugent deploys all the intellect and linguistic brilliance required of his former profession, coupled with the deep humour, understanding and genuine interest in his fellow human beings essential to his vocation.” The Guardian