The Journey Home
Dermot Bolger, . . Univ. of Texas, $24.95 (242pp) ISBN 978-0-292-71806-7
Set in the suburbs of Dublin in the early ’80s, this novel—Irish poet, playwright and novelist Bolger’s third—chillingly portrays a bleak Ireland that offers its youth few options. When Francis “Hano” Hanrahan finds temporary employment at the voters’ register’s office, he meets Shay, a charismatic trickster who spins entertainment out of their dreary workplace. As Shay’s sidekick, Hano gets caught up in Dublin’s nightlife and becomes further estranged from his parents. Before the year is over, Shay leaves for the factories of Germany and Hano’s father dies. Left responsible for his mother and four younger siblings, Hano has little choice but to work for local tycoon Pascal Plunkett, whose brother Patrick is a junior minister in the national government. As Pascal’s chauffeur and sometime heavy, Hano finds himself ensnared in the Plunkett brothers’ ruthless world. By the time Shay returns from the continent, both young men have been irrevocably damaged, and their attempt to free themselves from the Plunketts ends in tragedy. Bolger generates intensity and lyricism from his characters’ despair as they spiral into criminality.
Reviewed on: 01/21/2008
Genre: Fiction