Women's Fiction, Irish Fiction, Love & Relationships - Fiction
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Overview
It is a warm afternoon in Dublin and Hanna Troy is wandering about the city with time to kill before her appointment at the Women's Centre. Her marriage is in ruins. Her husband is having an affair and refusing to find out if he is the cause of their childlessness, so she is hurt and angry. During the couple of hours of her wait she reviews her life; childhood in a border county, her career as a professional photographer, her husband's success as an architect and her relationship with the members of her extended family especially her half-sister Rose. What emerges is a portrait of a complex woman, with most grievous faults and quite angelic virtues. Hanna's self-told story is often shocking, sometimes maddening but always engrossing, and told with rare frankness and great beauty.Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
A kaleidescopic jumble of flashbacks dilutes the power of this first novel's moving scenes depicting a troubled marriage. Freelance photographer Hanna Troy, whose union with successful architect Sam Wright is foundering over their inability to conceive a child, becomes enraged when she discovers Sam is having an affair with his provocative young assistant. While waiting for a counselor at a women's crisis center, she searches her past for clues and comfort. Award-winning Irish poet and short story-writer O'Donnell ( Strong Pagans ) adroitly explores the dynamics of Hanna's eccentric, close-knit family and also excels at evoking a sense of place: a park in Dublin comes alive with street musicians and dancers; a marketplace in Alexandria, Egypt, glows with color and vitality. The Alexandrian scene, which hints at the possibility of a marital reconciliation, is a neatly encapsulated gem of detailed, articulate writing, unlike the confusing flashbacks. Unfortunately, Hanna's consistently sullen mood and the self-pitying whine of her first-person narration give the book an unpleasantly sour tone. (Aug.)Book Details
Published
March 15, 1993
Publisher
Poolbeg Press Ltd
Pages
193
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781853712593