Book Review: Walk the Blue Fields by Claire Keegan
on Sheila Ash (India), Unknown, 34 days ago
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Walk the Blue FieldsbyClaire KeeganMy rating:4 of 5 stars I really enjoyed this collection . Afterwards some stories resided in my
mind better and longer than others, but what isn't diminished is the
strength of Keegan's writing, her keen eye for the timelessness of the
situations people find themselves in. See this 2022 review of her
writinghttps://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/05/bo...(1)The Long and Painful Death- I wondered if this would be a story about
someone dying gruesomely or from a lingering disease. I considered
missing this first story in the collection but I dived in and urge you
to do the same. A young writer has just arrived in residence at Henrich
Boll's house, her first day is interrupted by the arrival of a German
professor wishing to see the house. Only after he leaves can she write.(On the edge of the village of Dugort, on Achill Island, on Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way, is Heinrich Böll Cottage (http://heinrichboellcottage.com/)
. Once belonging to Nobel Prize-winning novelist Heinrich Böll, the
cottage offers fortnightly residencies to writers and artists, providing
time and space for you to work.https://halekatie.com/2021/10/24/resi...)(2)The Parting Gift- young woman leaves abusive family.(3)Walk the Blue Fields- a story of weddings - a young woman's ( with
doubts about the future success of this bond) , a priest's with God (
this bond is struggling) , a Chineseman's with healing massage ( the
successful bond), and a bond between two of them broken because of
another bond - "two people hardly ever want the same thing at any given
point in life. It is sometimes the hardest part of being human".I
really liked this story, it is one of those short stories with many
layers and much depth that can successfully translate to the big screen,
like Proulx's Brokeback Mountain did.(4)Dark Horses- In the
bar in rural Ireland they drown their sorrows and place their bets. It
may be Norris who has "drunk two farms" but it is Brady who is the dark
horse. He is a man who Leyden, who needs help shoeing his own horses,
"didn't think you had it in you" and whose dreams are filled with their
presence and their owner "the finest woman (who) ever came around these
parts" whom he lost over his drunken behaviour.Keegan once again masterfully creates ber characters, their lives and situations. Her dialog is spot on.(5) The Forester's Daughter - Story
of a farming family, the Devlins, the father "with his 'three
teenagers, the milking and the mortgage", the daughter's heartbreak over
a dog, the mother's over how her life turned out. Long buried secrets
emerge one evening as the mother tells her neighbours a less than
adequately disguised story.The longest story in this collection it feels well rounded, complete and once again would make a terrific movie drama.(6)Close to the Water's Edge -This
story is not based in Ireland, instead we are with a young man, a
student, celebrating his 21st with his mother and her millionaire
husband. We know little or the young man other than what happens that
evening, we are told his mother's mother's back story but the story
leaves so much unsaid, untold. It leaves us readers to decipher both the
gaps and the ending. Was this Keegan's intention? There is a poignant
motif that is repeated like the tides in the story.The grandmother
who needed her first sight of the sea before settling down yet she "with
only an hour to spend (on the coast) , would not get into the water,
even though she was a strong river swimmer " because "she had no idea
how deep it was" instead "she jumped into the road and stopped (her
husband's) car. Then she climbed in and spent the rest of her life with a
man who would have gone home without her"How is his experience
swimming in the sea going to effect his life? Will he change his flight
and leave? Or will he confront the bigoted millionaire? The story does
not tell.(7)Surrender (after McGahern)The afternote in Keegan's book says this story was inspired by an incident recollected inJohn McGahern'sMemoirconcerning his father who sat on a bench in Galway and ate 24 oranges
before he married. Keegan transposes this onto a police sergeant .(8)Night of the Quicken Trees- back to the folk, folklore and
superstitions of rural Ireland, this time in a highly comical story of
mid-life singleton Margaret Flusk and her bachelor neighbour, whom we
only know as Stack. There's the usual child out of wedlock, the fortune
teller, the gossips rooted in the place, in the land, steeped in
traditional ways , superstitions , faith and its consequences. But there
is also a deft comic touch in the language,the dialog and scenes.
Josephine the goat "who had the run of the house" is just hilarious. It
is a mixture of the mundane aspects of life, the dreams fired by
folklore, and all the way things can pivot, whether that is between love
and faith, between hope and despair, between healing and hatred. All
perhaps with Josephine having the last laugh. What a way to end a
collection. Brilliant.ashramblings