5/28/2023 0 Comments Small things like these bookNow approaching middle age, with five daughters of his own, he knows that he has been lucky, but also that something sets him apart from those around him - even his steady, capable and loving wife. But though he has little time for contemplation, his mind returns to his childhood, in which the kindness of the Protestant woman for whom his mother worked as a housekeeper, saved him - a child born out of wedlock, father unknown - from an uncertain and precarious future. It is a few days before Christmas in 1985, and Bill Furlong, a coal-and-timber merchant, is hard pressed, working around the clock in bitter weather to make sure that fuel is delivered before the holiday. Yet in other respects the life it describes is familiar, and the Wexford town of New Ross, dominated by the River Barrow and governed by the rhythms of work and family, is representative of life as it is still lived outside the country’s major population centres. This is Ireland before the boom and bust of the Celtic Tiger before the insidious, everyday power of the Catholic church began to be eroded by the exposure of multiple abuse scandals before its population voted overwhelmingly in favour of marriage equality and access to abortion. Claire Keegan’s tiny, cataclysmic novel takes us into the heart of small-town Ireland a few decades ago, creating a world that feels in certain respects dead and buried but whose legacy the country is still processing.
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