Current:Home > FinanceClaire Keegan's 'stories of women and men' explore what goes wrong between them -ProfitZone
Claire Keegan's 'stories of women and men' explore what goes wrong between them
View
Date:2025-04-21 22:39:39
Claire Keegan's newly published short story collection, So Late in the Day, contains three tales that testify to the screwed up relations between women and men. To give you a hint about Keegan's views on who's to blame for that situation, be aware that when the title story was published in France earlier this year, it was called, "Misogynie."
In that story, a Dublin office worker named Cathal is feeling the minutes drag by on a Friday afternoon. Something about the situation soon begins to seem "off." Cathal's boss comes over and urges him to "call it a day"; Cathal absentmindedly neglects to save the budget file he's been working on. He refrains from checking his messages on the bus ride home, because, as we're told, he: "found he wasn't ready — then wondered if anyone ever was ready for what was difficult or painful." Cathal eventually returns to his empty house and thinks about his fiancée who's moved out.
On first reading we think: poor guy, he's numb because he's been dumped; on rereading — and Keegan is the kind of writer whose spare, slippery work you want to reread — maybe we think differently. Keegan's sentences shape shift the second time 'round, twisting themselves into a more emotionally complicated story. Listen, for instance, to her brief description of how Cathal's bus ride home ends:
[A]t the stop for Jack White's Inn, a young woman came down the aisle and sat in the vacated seat across from him. He sat breathing in her scent until it occurred to him that there must be thousands if not hundreds of thousands of women who smelled the same.
Perhaps Cathal is clumsily trying to console himself; perhaps, though, the French were onto something in entitling this story, "Misogynie."
It's evident from the arrangement of this collection that Keegan's nuanced, suggestive style is one she's achieved over the years. The three short stories in So Late in the Day appear in reverse chronological order, so that the last story, "Antarctica," is the oldest, first published in 1999. It's far from an obvious tale, but there's a definite foreboding "woman-in-peril" vibe going on throughout "Antarctica." In contrast, the central story of this collection, called, "The Long and Painful Death," which was originally published in 2007, is a pensive masterpiece about male anger toward successful women and the female impulse to placate that anger.
Our unnamed heroine, a writer, has been awarded a precious two-week's residency at the isolated Heinrich Böll house on Achill Island, a real place on Ireland's west coast. She arrives at the house, exhausted, and falls asleep on the couch. Keegan writes that: "When she woke, she felt the tail end of a dream — a feeling, like silk — disappearing; ..."
The house phone starts ringing and the writer, reluctantly, answers it. A man, who identifies himself as a professor of German literature, says he's standing right outside and that he's gotten permission to tour the house.
Our writer, like many women, needs more work on her personal boundaries: She puts off this unwanted visitor 'till evening; but she's not strong enough to refuse him altogether. After she puts the phone down, we're told that:
"What had begun as a fine day was still a fine day, but had changed; now that she had fixed a time, the day in some way was obliged to proceed in the direction of the German's coming."
She spends valuable writing time making a cake for her guest, who, when he arrives turn out to be a man with "a healthy face and angry blue eyes." He mentions something about how:
"Many people want to come here. ... Many, many applications." "
"I am lucky, I know," [murmurs our writer.]
The professor is that tiresome kind of guest who "could neither create conversation nor respond nor be content to have none." That is, until he reveals himself to be a raging green-eyed monster of an academic.
This story is the only one of the three that has what I'd consider to be a happy ending. But, maybe upon rereading I'll find still another tone lurking in Keegan's magnificently simple, resonant sentences.
veryGood! (3)
Related
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- New York man shot crossbow that killed infant daughter, authorities say
- Man charged with murder in stabbings of 3 elderly people in Boston-area home
- As Scientists Struggle with Rollbacks, Stay At Home Orders and Funding Cuts, Citizens Fill the Gap
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Is 100% Renewable Energy Feasible? New Paper Argues for a Different Target
- Shop the Best New May 2023 Beauty Launches From L'Occitane, ColourPop, Supergoop! & More
- A Coal Ash Spill Made These Workers Sick. Now, They’re Fighting for Compensation.
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Half a Loaf: Lawmakers Vote to Keep Some Energy Funds Trump Would Cut
Ranking
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Lily-Rose Depp Recalls Pulling Inspiration From Britney Spears for The Idol
- Offset and His 3 Sons Own the Red Carpet In Coordinating Looks
- Dr. Anthony Fauci to join the faculty at Georgetown University, calling the choice a no-brainer
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Dancing with the Stars Pros Daniella Karagach and Pasha Pashkov Welcome First Baby
- Kim Cattrall Returning to And Just Like That Amid Years of Feud Rumors
- American Climate Video: Floodwaters Test the Staying Power of a ‘Determined Man’
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Trump Plan Would Open Huge Area of Alaska’s National Petroleum Reserve to Drilling
Armie Hammer Not Charged With Sexual Assault After LAPD Investigation
International Day of Climate Action Spreads Across 179 Countries
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Kinder Morgan Cancels Fracked Liquids Pipeline Plan, and Pursues Another
Rent is falling across the U.S. for the first time since 2020
Fading Winters, Hotter Summers Make the Northeast America’s Fastest Warming Region