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D. A. Mishani–THREE

“They met on a dating site for divorced singles.  His profile was unexciting, which was exactly why she wrote to him.  Forty-two years old, divorced once, lives in a Tel Aviv suburb.  Not ‘excited to swallow life whole’ or ‘on a self-discovery journey I’d like you to join me on….’  Three pictures…all of which showed something reassuring about his face, nothing too special.”

cover threeWinner of three European prizes for his award-winning detective series featuring police inspector Avraham Avraham, D. A. Mishani changes gears here with this standalone novel.   Though he employs all his talents and experience as a detective story writer here in pacing his story and its complications, his primary focus is on the psychology of three women seeking companionship from a man who is looking for a change of scenery without serious commitment.  Divided into three parts, the entire first part concerns Orna, the recently divorced mother of a sensitive young son who is receiving therapy for his difficulties in adjusting to the family’s new lives.  His father has quickly remarried a woman with two children and has moved with them to Nepal while Orna and her son remain in Tel Aviv.

Ancient St. Andrews, now a Scottish guesthouse in Jerusalem, to which one of the women is invited by her lover.

Ancient St. Andrews, now a Scottish guesthouse in Jerusalem, to which one of the women is invited by her lover.

Son Eran has not seen his father, received a note, or had a phone call from him in months, and Orna has been trying to help her boy while working full-time as a teacher and adjusting to her own changed life and expectations after the divorce.  When she meets a divorced man on a dating website, she is careful to avoid giving much personal information or assuming an instant connection with him, and he, too, is being careful.  Both parties withhold information and hide it behind general statements instead of being open and honest as they conduct their affair. It is not until the hundred-page mark that real action takes place and Mishani’s fame as a mystery writer begins to become obvious as the narrative becomes more plot-based.

Hotel Trianon in Bucharest, to which another woman is invited

Hotel Trianon in Bucharest, to which another woman is invited

Part II introduces Emilia, another young woman, this one an immigrant from Latvia. She has been living as a caretaker for an elderly pediatrician and working with his more agile wife for two years, and when the old man dies, Emilia is out of a job.  Seeking part-time work with another elderly woman, she gets the job but has no place to live, little money for food, and major financial problems.  When Adina, her elderly charge, goes to a nursing home, Emilia begins to see ghosts and seeks solace in a local church, where the priest feels like her son.  Part III introduces a new point of view, that of Ella, the third young woman, one with a family who is trying to complete a thesis for a belated Master’s degree.  Ella, like Orna and Emilia, also keeps her life hidden, even when a man tries to befriend her at the cafe where she spends much time working on her research papers.  Unlike her predecessors, however, Ella has a secret agenda which makes her much less vulnerable.

One man enjoys bike-riding in Yarkon Park.

Yarkon Park in Tel Aviv, where one man enjoys bike-riding.

To avoid spoilers, I have deliberately omitted key elements which turn this psychological study of three women into a dramatic action novel which speeds along as it absorbs elements from all the preceding sections and combines them into a carefully constructed and un-put-downable mystery novel.  Elements of foreshadowing, which most readers will recognize and question as they are reading the stories of the three women, suggest further action and perhaps overlaps during the early stages, and as the novel progresses, filled with “ah-ha” moments, even names begin to repeat.  Some characters appear in more than one section, and time speeds up in the final section with important scenes taking place years after the major events which took place in Parts I and II.  The book, though different from what it appears to be, at first, is an exciting crime story with well-developed characters, several climactic scenes related to individual women, and a more-than satisfying conclusion.     *  *   *

418mjuDB+3L._SX326_BO1,204,203,200_Note:  My understanding of this novel became clearer with a sudden, accidental discovery.  The advance review copy which I received, and the finished copy which has been published in the meantime, both include a quotation from Israel’s Haaretz Book Review on the cover, indicating that this novel “will be remembered as a work that heralded a new-wave in Israeli fiction just as My Michael, by Amos Oz once did.”   

Though I have liked and reviewed My Michael, I did not understand what “new-wave” was being heralded here and was curious about it.  On the haaretz.com site,  I found a most revealing interview between Ayelett Shani and author Dror Mishani, in which the two discuss why “crime novels don’t do so well” in Israel.  In short, Mishani says, Israeli literature has traditionally focused on elements of national identity, not on the personal identities of citizens, especially miscreants, who challenge public values, morality, and national goals. 

Author D. A. Mishani

Author D. A. Mishani

In addition, police are not traditionally celebrated in Israeli novels, and the western cliché of the sad and lonely detective who drowns his sorrows in alcohol does not exist in Israel.  In Three the police do not appear until near the ending of the novel, and little time is spent on the development of a case against the criminal because the reader has known the who and why of each crime from the outset.  The imaginary back and forth between reader and author common to western crime novels, as the reader tests his/her own thoughts of the crime against what the police believe and discover in the novel, does not occur here, nor is it needed. Readers interested in the history of Israeli crime fiction, will find this interview both entertaining and revelatory, especially in relation to this unusual and intriguing novel.

Photos.  Ancient St. Andrews, now a Scottish guesthouse in Jerusalem, may be found on https://www.itraveljerusalem.com

The Hotel Trianon in Bucharest, to which one woman was invited is from https://www.travelagewest.com

Yarkon Park in Tel Aviv is a favorite bike-riding spot for one man.  https://www.lonelyplanet.com/

The interview of Dror Mishani  by Ayelett Shani appears here on Haaretz:  https://www.haaretz.com

My Michael, reviewed in January, 2012, may be found here:  http://marywhipplereviews.com

The author’s photo is on https://www.vjbooks.com

THREE
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Book Club Suggestions, Israel, Literary, Mystery, Thriller, Psychological study
Written by: D. A. Mishani
Published by: Europa Editions
Date Published: 08/18/2020
ISBN: 978-1609456092
Available in: Ebook Paperback Hardcover

“In the summer of 1840, the whole of London, from monarch to maidservants, was gripped by the unfolding drama in Norfolk street, but behind it lay another story, a work of fiction, and an ardent debate about the dangers of glamorizing vice and whether or not serious crime should be portrayed in fiction at all.”

cover harman murder by the bookOn May 5, 1840, Lord William Russell, a quiet, elderly member of the aristocracy, was found in the bedroom of his unpretentious London townhouse with his throat slit so severely that his head was almost detached.  Other wounds to his chest were equally horrifying.  The shock of the murder reverberated throughout the city, especially among the upper classes, who well knew his prominent family and that of his deceased wife. The servant classes, including Lord Russell’s own servants, were all terrified by the potential investigation which might involve them or someone they knew well.  A next door neighbor reported that he had heard a brief cry in the middle of the night, and a visitor at a house across the street thought he had seen a naked man through the windows of the Russell house, but there had been no uproar during the time the murder actually took place.  The downstairs rooms of the house, in disarray, looked as if they had been burgled, though only a few small things seemed to be missing. When the police came and investigated, they added to the disarray with their own investigations and minor discoveries.  With a question as to motivation for the murder, and the murder scene so surprisingly lacking in blood, none of which appeared on the clothing or uniforms of the staff, there were few physical clues. The servants’ quarters and residences were searched with no result.

Author photo by Caroline Forbes.

Author photo by Caroline Forbes.

The social and political situation in England in 1839 – 1840, which involved serious attention being focused on the poor and the non-aristocratic working class, quickly becomes an issue for author Claire Harman, who sees and investigates this murder and its aftereffects as a possible symptom of social change during this period.  London was “teeming with immigrants, the unemployed, and a burgeoning working class who were more literate and organized than ever before.”  The winter of 1939 had been one of “mass rallies by Chartists demanding universal suffrage,” and in some places had turned into bloody riots.  Over two hundred Chartists had been convicted of high treason for their actions and were transported out of the country.  Several fiction writers of the period came under fire for “writing fictions that glamorized vice and made heroes of criminals.”  Popular books now were seen by some as “pandering to the lowest…full of violent excitements and vulgarity that could all too easily lead susceptible readers astray,” and a whole genre of  “Newgate books,” for the masses, evolved.

Willian Harrison Ainsworth (1905 - 1882)

William Harrison Ainsworth (1805 – 1882)

One such book, written by William Harrison Ainsworth, “the golden boy of his generation,”  was Jack Sheppard, which became, for some social critics, a cause célèbre, the story of a real-life petty thief and escape artist who became increasingly violent as he grew older.  In a time in which copyrights did not exist, the story about this robber who escapes punishment for his crimes for years could be used and made into a play by anyone at all.  Jack Sheppard, was, in fact, turned into six different dramas by six different authors, with all the dramas playing simultaneously in London to huge crowds at the time of the Russell murder. Ainsworth did not make a cent from their success.  A book about Sir Samuel Romilly, who had also died from having his throat slit, was found at the Russell crime scene and looked suspicious, since the servants claimed that Sir William never read in bed. Quieter writers, like Charles Dickens, had published Oliver Twist as a serial in 1937 – 39, detailing the life of an impoverished boy who generated much sympathy, and at the time of Lord Russell’s murder, Dicken’s Barnaby Rudge was gaining readers with its brutal stabbing.  William Makepeace Thackeray criticized the Newgate novels for their sentimental and sensational content – and also criticized Dickens on the same grounds.  In 1839 – 40, Thackeray wrote Catherine under an assumed name, describing the life of a female murderer whom he had intended to make repulsive and whose crimes he planned to use as moral lessons.  Then he discovered, to his amazement, that he had unwittingly made her far more sympathetic than he had intended.

"1840 watercolor of Oxford's assassination attempt. Oxford stands in front of the Green Park railings, pointing a pistol at Victoria and the Prince Consort, while a policeman runs towards him. One of the Queen's attendants is on horseback at left."

1840 Watercolor of Oxford’s assassination attempt. To see enlargement, click on photo, and when the small copy opens on Wikipedia, click on it again to enlarge. Fascinating accuracy.

In the meantime, Norfolk St., the site of the Russell murder, became a tourist destination, with hundreds of interested onlookers crowding the sidewalks around the house.  Even Prince Albert became interested in the investigation.  In a consummate irony, he and Queen Victoria themselves would become the targets of an assassination plot by Edward Oxford, just a month after the Russell murder.   Amidst all the Newgate novels and plays going on simultaneously, and with the real life murders and attempted murders of Lord Russell and later the Queen and Prince Albert, interest in London crime was high.  News magazines and papers were selling wildly. The Russell investigation continued, and shortly afterward, Lord Russell’s Swiss valet, François Benjamin Courvoisier was arrested, consigned to await trial at Newgate Prison.  Ironically, Edward Oxford was also there, awaiting trial for his attempted murders of the royal family.  Both men were convicted, but with different fates.

Francis Benjamin Courvoisier, former valet of Lord William Russell

Francis Benjamin Courvoisier, former valet of Lord William Russell

Claire Harman’s careful research and her eye for telling details, even as she focuses on the broad theme of murder in 1840, and the controversy over whether murder is an appropriate subject of fiction, make this an absorbing study.  She draws in the reader with her selection of facts and her elucidation of the goals of literature as seen by famed authors of the day, making them almost as compelling as the gruesome realities of real murder. The many undeveloped details surrounding Lord Russell’s murder, the lack of scientific research, and the omission of any real motive make the reader question the guilt of Courvoisier – or at least question whether he operated alone. He changes his account of the murder several times and even becomes involved in the literary controversy of whether a novel can kill, claiming that he first got the idea of the killing when he saw the play of Jack Sheppard.  His demeanor at the conclusion of his trial is bewildering.  Author Claire Harman in her “Postscript” chapter offers many new possibilities regarding the murderer and much to think about regarding censorship and freedom of the press.

ALSO by Claire Harman: Jane’s Fame: How Jane Austen Conquered the World

PHOTOS:   The author photo by Caroline Forbes appears on https://www.startribune.com

The picture of William Harrison Ainsworth is from https://www.britannica.com

The 1840 watercolor of the attempted assassination of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert by Edward Oxford may be found on https://en.wikipedia.org

The print of Francis Benjamin Courvoisier appears on http://www.executedtoday.com/tag/francois-benjamin-courvoisier/

 

MURDER by the BOOK: The Crime that Shocked Dickens's London
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Book Club Suggestions, Historical, Non-fiction, Social and Political Issues, England
Written by: Claire Harman
Published by: Vintage/Knopf
Date Published: 02/04/2020
ISBN: 978-0525436157
Available in: Ebook Paperback Hardcover

Note:  Legna Rodriguez Iglesias is a WINNER of international prizes for her poetry, her plays, and her short stories.

“To write a book whose leitmotif is the bond, affectionate or grotesque, with a pet, in this case a dog, is not a thing she was the first to come up with.  Literary history is full of similar examples.  Even Anton Chekhov, a man of theater, wrote about a dog, and I’m referring to a very serious story published for children called “Whitebrow.”  – Comment by one of the author’s mentors.

cover favorite girlfriend french bulldog

Cuban author Legna Rodríguez Iglesias, a poet, fiction writer, and playwright, challenges the reader of this experimental novel by telling her story in fifteen seemingly stand-alone episodes, narrated by an unusual assortment of people.  My Favorite Girlfriend was a French Bulldog  also comes with its own style, set of themes, and characters, which do not match what I’ve come to expect from international fiction in translation.  Though most of these early stories are fairly straightforward, the atmosphere feels different – a bit “off” – even unique – among all other story collections I have ever read.  Some of this is related to the circumstances in which the characters find themselves.  These include a young woman who wants a visa but is dressed improperly for her ministry appointment, a woman virulently at odds with her mother, a forty-year-old family man who pretends to himself that he excels in a totally different kind of life, and a traveler to Miami who meets friends, gets a tattoo, and experiences new love.

Mt. Sinai

Mt. Sinai

The characters begin to seem more and more offbeat when they include a person who befriends an android who will edit a text, someone whose father has turned into a tree, an elderly grandfather speaking from the dead, and a woman invited to a world poetry festival, where she is the only person wearing a series of masks.  In principle, she believes that masks are political positions, logical reactions, and an attitude toward life, always hiding the person beneath it.  Many, if not most, characters are planning a journey into the future and into a new life, in part because “The worst part of being no one is not exactly as logic would have it – assuming it is logical to be someone – being no one, but rather knowing, and on top of that accepting, that you are no one here and now.  The phenomenon happens all the time, in any society and in any system.”

Black Prince flower.

Black Prince flower.

A Cuban by birth, the author sets many of these stories in Cuba, but she leaves Cuba for Miami in one story, and in another, “Sinai,” the main character is talking to God at Mt. Sinai, or her interpretation of it.  This character is begging God to take her brother far away and out of her life.  She is deaf at the beginning of this story, and becomes blind as it develops, then mute, as God gives her the answer she may deserve.  She doesn’t “get it,” however.  “I still wonder what I said wrong, Lord,” she replies.  Some stories are so universal in setting and ideas that location is relatively unimportant.  In “Wanda,” a story written as a poem, the darkest of dark ironies prevail. A young married couple, childhood sweethearts, have been together for twenty years and have two children.  Then the husband changes emotionally, and his wife wants him to leave.  When he comes to her door two months later, the result is a bloody massacre, resulting with both the wife and husband dead.  The family insists on having a joint wake, however, and their children are insistent that there be no flowers, especially “black princes.”  “Kids are like that,” the narrator explains.

French Buildog

French Bulldog

The “elephant in the room” here, is actually a French bulldog, which, despite the title, plays a surprisingly small role for most of the book.  Several of the short poems which introduce the stories at the beginning of the collection, refer to the French bulldog very briefly.  The reader “saves” this information as the succeeding stories evolve.  The first such poem, which acts as the epigraph, reads “My favorite girlfriend was/ a French bulldog. / When I scolded her,/ she peed herself.”  The next, a practical note, is “A French bulldog/ and a telephone/ cost the same,/ and both can provide you with/ the affection/ you lack.”  But French bulldogs can also be fussy:  “On preferring/ the cheese croissant,/ my French bulldog/ demonstrates to me,/ in the first place,/ that he has very good taste,/ and in the second,/ that he will be very hard/ to please.”  At this point, about a third of the way through the book, the introductory poems and the narratives stop referring to the French bulldog, and as readers approach the end of the book, they may question why the French bulldog is part of the significant title, when it plays such a small role overall.  Then, suddenly, it all makes sense.  The French bulldog becomes a narrator and sets the characters and their lives into perspective.

Legna Rodriguez Ignesias

Author Legna Rodriguez Iglesias

Legna Rodriguez Iglesias is a challenging writer for those who are accustomed to clear  beginnings, middles, and ends to their books and stories, and her characters are sometimes so offbeat that predicting where she may be going with them is not possible. Her dark humor and sense of irony make these stories more human, however, and her themes of isolation, the search for love, the need to feel safe, the urge for independence, and the complexities of family are universal.  Readers looking for literary adventure will find that this collection of stories will take them in new and fascinating directions down pathways they may never have explored.  If you decide to take that route, just do not forget to take your French bulldog with you.  You may need him.

Photos. Mount Sinai, where one character talks with God.  https://en.wikipedia.org

The Black Prince flower, a variety of hollyhock.  https://www.amazon.com

A French Bulldog.  https://www.alamy.com

The author’s photo: https://www.bloodaxebooks.com

MY FAVORITE GIRLFRIEND WAS A FRENCH BULLDOG
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Cuba, Experimental, Literary, Short Stories
Written by: Legna Rodriguez Iglesias
Published by: McSweeney's
Date Published: 07/14/2020
ISBN: 978-1944211776
Available in: Ebook Hardcover

“Lojacono…had remained in the apartment alone.  It was something he always did, if at all possible.  He was convinced that in certain situations something was left hovering in the air, like a particulate cloud of emotions, a tear in the surface of reality through which a barely noticeable stream flowed, disappearing entirely once the place became the Murder Scene.”

cover puppiesWith the latest entry in his crime series set in Pizzofalcone, a precinct high atop a hill in Naples, author Maurizio de Giovanni adds another layer to the characters who have made themselves so intriguing to readers of the previous four novels in this series.  The police department in Pizzofalcone consists of outcasts from other police departments all over Italy, new officers who have replaced the original “Bastards of Pizzofalcone,” all but two members of which were dismissed for corruption. Each new member of the force has come with some kind of “baggage,” however, including, in the case of Lojacono, the false accusation by a low level crook that Lojacono was an informant for organized crime. Gradually, over the course of the series, Lojacono and his new partners find success in their jobs, and even come to like and trust each other.

Maurizio-De-Giovanni-250x250Known for his noir murder mysteries – and an additional series of nine novels set in Mussolini’s Italy, the broadly based Ricciardi series – author de Giovanni has mellowed since the first book in the Pizzofalcone series, The Crocodile.  In that book, Lojacono, newly arrived in Naples from Sicily, identifies and removes a killer of young people in what is by far the darkest noir crime novel that de Giovanni has ever written. In The Crocodile, Lojacono is operating virtually on his own, with most of his new fellow officers convinced, wrongly, that the murders of young people are being conducted by the Camorra, the Neapolitan Mafia.  Earning his stripes with his own work on that case, Lojacono develops a friendship with the new head of investigation, Laura Piras, from Sardinia, and begins to feel like part of the new group of police he has joined in Naples.  The later mysteries in the series, including this one, give readers a chance to see the six-member team in action, with the characters becoming more fully developed and revealing their personal sides as they develop investigative talents and personal skills they never realized they had.

The steep hills of Pizzofalcone require some unusual road work.

The steep hills of Pizzofalcone require some unusual road work.

With a title like Puppies, this latest Pizzofalcone mystery sounds more like a “cozy” than a noir mystery.  De Giovanni, however, is clever.  He draws in readers with the action here, starting with the last thoughts of a dying woman, followed by a section in which two people are talking about leaving something – not identified as human or animal – outside in an alley where it will get noticed without delay.  The novel then focuses on officer Romano, a hulk who has trouble controlling his temper.  As Romano leaves for work, he passes garbage cans in the alley, just as a “broken doll” starts to cry.  A newborn baby has been left with the trash.  By the time the police get to the scene of the baby, Romano, in a panic, is trying to warm it and help it breathe.  The baby  has a serious infection, but Romano refuses to let her stay alone at night at the hospital.  He is asked to give the baby a name so she will seem more “real” while in the hospital.  No puppies are mentioned at all until about fifty pages into the book.  Gradually, the reader comes to understand that “puppies” are symbolic of lives that cannot survive without help.

Santa Maria degli Angeli in Pizzofalcone.

Santa Maria degli Angeli in Pizzofalcone.

As the search begins to find the mother of the baby,  a different crime becomes a focus, the murder of a young Eastern European woman who has been working in Naples. Subplots galore emerge.  A young boy,  an immigrant from Sri Lanka, sees and approaches Aragona, the least popular officer of the Pizzofalcone group, the son of a wealthy family with political connections.  The boy’s little dog has been stolen, and he is heartbroken. Though the officer has no interest in pets or immigrants, he takes some interest in the boy’s problem when he discovers that other small animals and pets throughout the city are also disappearing.  Over the course of the novel, this officer, who is a lost cause in the previous three novels, becomes far more human than anyone would ever expect and makes changes in his life.  At the same time, an elderly priest describes his personal goals regarding people without hope who end up as suicides, of which there are more than usual in Pizzofalcone.  The oldest member of the police of Pizzofalcone is also investigating these suicides from a different angle.  Complications in the love lives of several of the characters are another major focus at the end of the novel.

Aragona lives at the Hotel Mediterraneo and enjoys breakfast and the attention of a young waitress.

Aragona lives at the Hotel Mediterraneo where he enjoys breakfast and the attention of a young waitress.

Readers of Maurizio de Giovanni, whether they be of the Pizzofalcone series or the Ricciardi series or both, know well that the author’s focus throughout nearly all of his novels is on the human side of crime and the people involved in it.  He is not afraid to show characters as they live their lives and deal with the conflicts between what’s “right” and what is legally correct.  His characters are not geniuses – they are far more real and far more attuned to living a “good” life than to being correct. He sees the dark side, but he also sees and appreciates the wonders that sometimes happen when a character falls in love and suddenly discovers the joys of sharing a life.  The author also has a tendency to include a little spiritual “magic” within dramatic circumstances at times of crisis.  The opening quotation, in which Lojacono comments on the “tear in the surface of reality” which sometimes happens in the aftermath of a terrible event, might just as easily have been made by Commissario Ricciardi in the Ricciardi series.  Ricciardi’s special talent is that he can “speak” to a murder victim if he visits the murder scene immediately after it happens.  Dark crime sometimes does “speak” to those who want to help, as the reader learns here – but there is nothing “cozy” about it.

Also by de Giovanni:     THE BASTARDS OF PIZZOFALCONE (Lojacono #2),    THE BOTTOM OF YOUR HEART (Ricciardi  #7)     BLOOD CURSE (Ricciardi #2),    BY MY HAND (Ricciardi #5),    COLD FOR THE BASTARDS OF PIZZOFALCONE (Lojacono #4).    THE CROCODILE (Lojacono #1),    DARKNESS FOR THE BASTARDS OF PIZZOFALCONE (Lojacono #3),    THE DAY OF THE DEAD (Ricciardi #4),    EVERYONE IN THEIR PLACE (Ricciardi #3),    GLASS SOULS: MOTHS FOR COMMISSARIO RICCIARDI (Ricciardi #8) ,    I WILL HAVE VENGEANCE (Ricciardi#1),    NAMELESS SERENADE (Ricciardi #9),    VIPER (Ricciardi #6)

Photos.  The author’s photo appears on https://www.toulouse-polars-du-sud.com

One of Pizzofalcone’s famous “ramp roads” is shown on https://www.napoliflash24.it/

Santa Maria degli Angeli in Pizzofalcone, one of Italy’s beautiful, old churches.  https://www.tripadvisor.it

Aragona lives at the Hotel Mediterraneo, where he enjoys breakfast and the attention of a young waitress.  https://www.letsbookhotel.com

PUPPIES
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Italy, Mystery, Thriller, Noir, Social and Political Issues
Written by: Maurizio de Giovanni
Published by: Europa, World Noir
Date Published: 07/21/2020
ISBN: 978-1609456047
Available in: Ebook Paperback

 

Roddy Doyle–LOVE

Note: Recipient of many literary prizes, Roddy Doyle was WINNER of the Booker Prize in 1993 for Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha and WINNER of the Irish PEN Award for his contributions to Irish Literature in 2009.

“He looked different, I decided.  He looked bad – torn. In crisis.  He was picking at his food.  There wasn’t much left on the plate – he must have been eating.  But he looked too thin.  The skin under his neck had become loose, wattled.  I’d told him he was looking well, when we’d met an hour before, and I’d meant it.  But now I was actually looking at him.” – Davy, contemplating his long-time friend Joe.

book cover - Version 3

Friendship has always played an important role in author Roddy Doyle’s work, and this novel, his thirteenth for adults, is his most intimate in its portrayal of two long-time friends who get together to talk, every now and then, and share their lives.  Friends since childhood, Davy and Joe have moved in different directions, with Davy now living in England and coming to Ireland periodically to visit his father in Dublin, and Joe still living in Dublin, where he has worked since high school and raised a family.  As the novel opens, the two, now approaching sixty, are meeting in a Dublin pub, and a long night of conversation between them forms the structure of this novel-in-dialogue as they share memories of the past, with most of the memories coming from Joe. Of primary importance to him, is an experience that took place exactly a year ago when Joe saw, for the first time in thirty-seven years, a woman he and Davy had both been in love with when they were twenty-one.  Neither Joe nor Davy had dated her then – or even had a conversation with her – but they both were mesmerized by her beauty.  Joe goes on to explain that last year he had been at a parent-teacher night at the Dublin school his children attended, and this woman, another parent, had recognized him immediately and come over to say hello, even giving him a peck on the cheek.  Though he recognized her immediately, he could not remember her name.

Author photo by Anthony Woods.

Author photo by Anthony Woods.

Flashing back to their earlier lives, just after Davy completed his post-high-school education and Joe had been working for four years and earning his own income, Joe describes his memories at twenty-one and their sudden discovery of the perfect spot to talk, an unnamed pub at which they were treated as grownups, one with no television, no horse racing, no radio, and no music.  Here they saw a man and three women at a table, and the “most gorgeous woman in the world” was one of those women.  Thirty-seven years have passed, and as Joe returns to his tale of the recent parent-teacher conference, he tells Davy,  “It was like she’d seen me the day before.  The way she behaved, the way she spoke to me.  Like it was 1981, or whenever….Lips.  Her lips kissed me, made actual contact with my skin.  Not the air near my skin.”  What was most amazing to him was that it also “felt normal….It didn’t feel like they had to catch up, rattle off the list of kids, and he didn’t want to waste the time they had until he was called in to meet the teacher.”  They exchange phone numbers.  And he learns that her name is Jessica.

Palace Bar, Dublin, mentioned late in the novel.

Palace Bar, Dublin, which Joe and Davy visit late in the novel.

With Joe doing most of the “talking,” this novel-in-dialogue tells the story of their marriages and the role this beautiful woman played in Joe’s early dreams and now, surprisingly, in his later life.  Though Joe’s wife Trish was also at the parent-teacher night, they had separated for the conferences so that they could see more of their children’s teachers, and Trish had missed this big moment.  As Joe develops a relationship with Jessica over time and shares it with Davy in this conversation, Roddy Doyle creates such a strong and intimate mood that readers will feel as if they are present at events through the intense conversation that takes place.  Though Joe insists that his wife Trish is a “force of nature” and that he “loves the ground Trish walks on,” he also says that he feels “something important missing.  Something’s lost and you haven’t a clue what it is.”  With Jessica, “I felt like I’d come home.”  He also insists, surprisingly, that sex has nothing to do with his feelings.  Davy’s marriage to Faye, by contrast, seems tame, and the reader gets few insights into Davy’s inner life, though Faye herself has a strain of wildness that keeps Davy constantly on his toes.  She inherited a store which she sold so that they could move to England and have their baby there, and they have stayed for thirty years.  Davy’s mother died long ago, and his father, who was never close to Faye, is now ill and hospitalized.

Late in the novel Joe comments that life with Jess is like "livin' in a fairy tale," such as "Stardust."

Late in the novel Joe comments that life with Jess is like “livin’ in a fairy tale,” such as “Stardust,” but not “really.”

As the two men talk, Joe’s earnest and honest approach to his life and those he cares for cannot help but make readers empathize with him, and even Davy feels for him though he does not always believe all he says, especially when his own memories of events differ from Joe’s.  He is concerned to learn that Jessica is not happy with Joe or with life in general, and Joe does not think she has ever been truly happy.  By contrast, Trish, from whom Joe is now separated is “a force of nature….“the happiest woman in Ireland.  Happiest woman ever born.”  Joe believes that Jess is happy only with him, and that’s important to him, even though he has lost Trish and the children he loves, as a result.  Health emergencies involving both men add yet another insight into life and love.

The many shades of love and the obligations and pleasures associated with it are seen though the vibrant conversations here, but the emphasis shifts to a very special kind of love in the conclusion when Davy is called to the hospice to visit his father.  It is in this section in which Davy, “the quiet one” in this dialogue, comes fully to life and Joe shows yet another aspect of his personality and understanding of love and friendship.  The novel is involving and often enlightening, despite what some readers may consider its overly long analysis involving the inner life and loves of Joe, a not very thoughtful man who, nevertheless, has a good heart.  Once again, Roddy Doyle has brought aspects of Dublin and its people fully to life and shared them with an empathetic world.

Also by Doyle:     THE DEAD REPUBLIC,      THE GUTS,     SMILE,     A STAR CALLED HENRY,     LIFE WITHOUT CHILDREN

Gardenia, a virtual plant in the virtual garden operated by the St. Francis Hospice, where Davy's father is stayling.

Gardenia, a virtual plant in the virtual garden operated by the St. Francis Hospice, where Davy’s father resides.

 

Photos. The author’s photo by Anthony Woods appears on https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com

The famous Palace Bar is from https://www.pinterest.com

Late in the novel Joe comments that life with Jess is like “livin’ in a fairy tale,” such as “Stardust.”  https://www.pinterest.com/

A virtual gardenia in the virtual garden operated by the St. Francis Hospice, where Davy’s father is staying.   https://hospicevirtualflowergarden.com/product/gardinea/

LOVE
REVIEW. PHOTOS. Experimental, Ireland, Literary, Psychological study |
Written by: Roddy Doyle
Published by: Viking
Date Published: 06/23/2020
ISBN: 978-1984880451
Available in: Ebook Paperback Hardcover
 

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