IRISH CREAM.The Banyan Tree Christopher Nolan Arcade Publishing, $25.95, 374 pp. This is the third book, and undoubtedly the best, by an extraordinary author who has conquered extreme difficulty in order to write. Christopher Nolan is mute and a paraplegic paraplegic /para·ple·gic/ (-ple´jik) 1. pertaining to or of the nature of paraplegia. 2. an individual with paraplegia. . This novel took him thirteen years to finish. He writes by having his head held as he taps at a typewriter with a stick attached to his forehead. Nevertheless, as if bursting out of the bonds of his disability, his prose pours out--lush, exuberant exuberant /ex·u·ber·ant/ (eg-zoo´ber-ant) copious or excessive in production; showing excessive proliferation. ex·u·ber·ant adj. Proliferating or growing excessively. , and evocative. The story is a simple one--the life of Minnie O'Brien on a small Irish farm. It opens with the weekly churning of butter and the language of its description is mesmerizing mes·mer·ize tr.v. mes·mer·ized, mes·mer·iz·ing, mes·mer·iz·es 1. To spellbind; enthrall: "He could mesmerize an audience by the sheer force of his presence" : Nursing still their helium harvest the cataracted crocks waited, still playing their stoic games, but the moment they were lifted up they yielded up their booty, listening in awe as their clotted cream dropped ploppingly down into the cold, damp coffin of dankness. There it lay fooling itself that it might yet escape but then snapped the lid, snap went the clamps, and up the churn was hoisted onto its stand. There in total darkness the cream lay while the churn hung where it sung, while Minnie geared herself up for the imponderables ahead. Nolan's prose has been called Joycean and passages like this give reason to the claim. Minnie, nee Humphries, has left service in her father's shop to marry Peter O'Brien Peter O'Brien (born March 25, 1960 at Murray Bridge, South Australia, Australia), is an Australian actor. O'Brien began his career in the 1980s in Australian television drama series. . After an idyllic i·dyl·lic adj. 1. Of or having the nature of an idyll. 2. Simple and carefree: an idyllic vacation in a seashore cottage. honeymoon in Dublin, "the city of just about right," they return to Drumhollow to farm their five fields and do the daily chores. They milk the cows, feed the calves, slop the pigs, and check the roosting hens before sitting down to tea in their own kitchen. Day follows day. She learns to help with the peat harvest, "'Now his slean swung toward her, and yielding him a catcher's grasp she clutched his sod, swung round and slapped it down onto the slatted barrow." And she learns to understand and cheer his game of hurling hurling, outdoor ball and stick game similar to field hockey (see hockey, field). The national pastime of Ireland, it was played for many centuries before the Gaelic Athletic Association standardized the rules in 1884. . Incident after incident is fraught with luminous detail and fresh insights. The very ordinariness of the story is transformed by the language. Minnie and Peter have three children. The oldest is already ordained or·dain tr.v. or·dained, or·dain·ing, or·dains 1. a. To invest with ministerial or priestly authority; confer holy orders on. b. To authorize as a rabbi. 2. a priest and the daughter become a nurse when Peter succumbs to the heart condition he has kept secret. And shortly thereafter Minnie's youngest son Frankie leaves her to set out on his own. Oddly enough the most absorbing part of the novel is Minnie's struggle with loneliness after her husband dies and her children leave Drumhollow one by one. Year after year she soldiers on with the farm work while Brendan, now a bishop, struggles with doubt and alcoholism in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , Sheila lives in a loveless marriage, and Frankie, her favorite, goes his lone wild way in Australia. Stubbornly holding to her belief that Frankie will return to farm the five fields and the family will be reunited "Reunited" was a #1 hit in the United States in 1979 by the Washington, D.C.-based group Peaches & Herb. Preceded by "Heart of Glass" by Blondie Billboard Hot 100 number one single May 5 1979 Succeeded by "Hot Stuff" by Donna Summer , she lives out her days in Drumhollow. There are emotion and intensity in the telling of the final part of Minnie's life but no real disappointment because of its truth to life. Readers will be held by the language to the very end: A clay crate before her, a clay crate behind her, clay in every Stygian stitch of the vacancy in the hole where she now lay, and lingering, the crowd gathered at the graveside waited the final decade for decoration at the end, as green grass the clay waited to grow, the earthworms to fodder, there in Drumhollow graveyard, where woman of women all, the Fenian-heart-stopper Minnie Humphries-that-was joined her husband-that-used-to-be for ever and ever, amen. Abigail McCarthy, a longtime Commonweal com·mon·weal n. 1. The public good or welfare. 2. Archaic A commonwealth or republic. Noun 1. contributor, lives in Washington, D.C. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion