Literary reviews by Tim Love.
Warning: Rather than reviews, these are often notes in preparation for reviews that were never finished, or pleas for help with understanding pieces. See Litref Reviews - a rationale for details.
Showing posts with label 'Dark lies the island'. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 'Dark lies the island'. Show all posts

Saturday, 26 June 2021

"Dark lies the island" by Kevin Barry (Vintage, 2013)

Stories from New Yorker, etc.

  • "Across the rooftops" - can't see much in it
  • "Wifey Redux" - Father of cute 17 year old angry about her boyfriend, and even angrier when he ditches her. He confronts the boyfriend. He's had mental problems before
  • "Fjord of Killary" - A fourtysomething poet who's not had a collection out for 5 years has bought a West Ireland hotel. He makes notes about the bar clientelle and their language. He's hoped to be known as a convivial host. When there's a flood, the hotel's isolated and he gives out free drinks. He feels he's becoming accepted
  • "A Cruelty" - A man on a train is anxious when it doesn't keep to the routine. He's anxious later when his park bench is occupied and when a hobo(?) confronts him
  • "Beer Trip to Llandudno" - A Camra branch from Liverpool have a daytrip, discussing their ale grading system and issues regarding the newsletter. They realise how pathetic they are
  • "Ernestine and Kit" - 2 60+ women drive around Eire trying to abduct toddlers.
  • "The Mainland Campaign" - A young bomber in London has to change plans
  • "Wistful England" - Daniel, a 25 y.o. house-sharing with some heavy drinkers, thinks he sees his ex in various places. At a nightclub he talks to her. He asks the bar staff afterwards if it really happened.
  • "Doctor Sot" - Sot (Dr Carl O'Connor), happily married, is an alcoholic. 30 years a GP, he asks to do some OutReach with local travellers (he'd seen that one of them was very pretty). While he spends a night in their camp his long-suffering wife "flowed through the house. For fear that he would get back early, she would lay cloths now over all the mirrors in the house"
  • "The Girls and the Dogs" - 8 months away from his wife and 8 month old daughter in Cork, the narrator's in hiding in a rotting caravan by a house where 2 sisters (one a gangster's wife) and their kids live. He's locked in the caravan for days, manages to escape. Inconsequential.
  • "White Hitachi" - Patrick, 36, frees his van from a pound and picks up his young brother from a juvenile detention unit. They pick up some drugs to distribute. Inconsequential. The dialogue, as usual, is lively though - He put a hand inside his togs and tigged at himself briefly ... 'When you get a bit of heat at all like the heat we're after getting today,' he said, 'the man below do be swimmin' in his own melt.
  • "Dark Lies the Island" - She's a cutter. She passed her exams and could go on to study medicine. She takes a year out to stay at the family's posh holiday home, maybe do some art. When she can, she logs into a chatroom of people interested in self-harm. She thinks that she might start cutting again tonight. Then she goes into the garden with the 9 kitchen knives, looks at the sea, and throws the knives far away.
  • "Berlin Arkonaplatez - My Lesbian Summer" - His summer with Silvija. My favourite.

Some stories share imagery - kids with shaven heads, etc. Perhaps consecutive stories share imagery?

Other reviews

  • Chris Power (In "Fjord of Killary", the highlight of this excellent collection. ... Not every story is so successful. "The Mainland Campaign"... compares unfavourably with a story by ... William Trevor. ... there is action and plot, but Steven's motives remain unexplored. ... "Beer Trip to Llandudno", conversely, has scant plot but carries plenty of meaning.)
  • goodreads