Art of Memory: Spill, Simmer, Falter, Wither
This is one of those books. You devour it because it is beautiful and unnerving and compelling and also because, deep down, you know this is not a book you can live with for days or weeks. It is not a book that you can stare at on your bedstand or your living room table. It is a book to be consumed. Afterwards, you might want to forget it. But you won't be able to. In other words, it is an Irish novel. Do I recommend it? I do. I think. Maybe. I'm not sure. I am writing this blog post less to tell you about this book because I am not ready to talk about it than because I want to try to hold onto some of the language without having to actually pick up and revisit the book. The language astounds me. It is not derivative. At least I don't think so. If it is derivative, it is of Joyce with maybe a tiny bit of Patrick McCabe. It is less, I don't know, inexorable, than either of those authors. And yet the story told here is much more haunting than theirs