Small Things Like These

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Claire Keegan: Small Things Like These (2021, Faber & Faber, Limited)

English language

Published Dec. 3, 2021 by Faber & Faber, Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-571-36871-6
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(45 reviews)

5 editions

Not for me

Novella about a man who grew up the son of an unwed mother in 1940s Ireland. Mainly concerning his inner life as he goes about the daily grind of life, and how something in him changes after some chance encounters at the local nunnery (aka Magdalen Laundry). This one was not for me. The writing was fine, and the topic something I feel strongly about, but I didn’t enjoy this nor did it elicit any strong feelings in me. Found it vaguely tedious.

Review of 'Small Things Like These' on 'Goodreads'

"How still it was up here but why was it not ever peaceful? The day had not yet dawned, and Furlong looked down at the dark shining river whose surface reflected equal parts of the lighted town. So many things had a way of looking finer, when they were not so close."

There is a convent in the town, that looks pretty fine from a distance, but houses a Magdalene laundry that the Irish townspeople don't talk much about. Bill Furlong, the coal merchant has lived a life defined by small things: some good, some bad, some comforting, some routine. When he goes to the convent a couple of days before Christmas to deliver coal, he inadvertently comes across a shivering, coatless, and barefoot young girl locked in the coal shed. Suddenly he is confronted with a big thing and his life is upended.

Keegan's sleight of hand is evidenced …

Review of 'Small Things Like These' on 'Storygraph'

Let's be honest: this is a short story.

The piece only has one drawn out character who faces one decision when the decision is made the piece is over. All the other characters are small things: two-dimensional stock, stereotypical. There's no real subplot, he wonders about his father, mother, and his girls but there's no action there.

The first 39 pages establish the character. The next 10 introduce the problem, the "convent". The piece is only 115 pages. The character approaches convent three times and makes his decision on Christmas eve. It’s like a long short story in structure.

This decision was a small thing for him. There's a thread that the character is different because he was raised by a matronly Protestant. He’s portrayed as having Protestant values not Catholic. The book is set in 1985, 15 years after the post Vatican 2 mass was imposed and so when …

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