‘So Late in the Day’ by Claire Keegan (2023) – 118 pages
Note that the subtitle of this collection of three stories is “Stories of Women and Men”, not “Stories of Men and Women”. In each of these stories, the woman is the main protagonist and the man plays a peripheral though critical part. “Critical” is the operative word here.
“That was the problem with women falling out of love; the veil of romance fell away from their eyes, and they looked in and could read you.
But this one didn’t stop there.”
The man can only react to the woman’s lessened opinion of him.
“He had looked at her then and again saw something ugly about himself reflected back at him, in her gaze.”
The second story has a nice twist to it, a female writer retaliating. She is staying at the Boll House, the former home of the famous German author Heinrich Boll on Achill Island, to work on her new story. Heinrich Boll’s family left this house as a working residence for writers.
A German literary professor visits her at the house and she hopes he won’t interfere with her writing progress, However it turns out that he has been spying on her and is highly critical of her.
“You come to this house of Heinrich Boll and make cakes and go swimming with no clothes on.”
Our woman writer retaliates the best way she knows how. She puts him in her story and gives him “the long and painful death” in the story, which is the story title.
The first lines of the last story, “Antarctica”, are :
“Every time the happily married woman went away, she wondered how it would feel to sleep with another man. That weekend she was determined to find out.”
I doubt there are very many readers who could stop reading after those opening sentences
It’s proving very difficult to criticize anything Claire Keegan writes, and I am not going to do it. These three stories are all fine. This is a very quick lively read.
Grade: A
Posted by kimbofo on February 9, 2024 at 4:00 AM
The UK/Aus edition of this is a single story… I felt ripped off at the time because it was quite pricey and when I discovered I could have read the entire story online for free I felt even more ripped off! I feel like publishers are taking advantage of her new-found. popularity 😐
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Posted by Anokatony on February 9, 2024 at 5:00 AM
Hi Kim,
Well, the publishing industry today is still not as bad off as the music industry today where you can listen to all the new songs and albums on Spotify or itunes for free. For musicians to make any money today, they have to tour. I’m quite sure that’s why the music quality has declined in recent years.
Not that the publishing industry is doing all that well…
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Posted by kimbofo on February 9, 2024 at 5:21 AM
You’re right about the music industry.
I think publishers are doing OK.
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Posted by whisperinggums on February 10, 2024 at 2:22 AM
I’ve read and reviewed the titular story (free, online, as kimbofo knows) and just loved loved loved it. She is a writer I need to read more of.
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Posted by Anokatony on February 10, 2024 at 2:30 AM
I’m not sure how Ireland does it, coming up with all these fiction writers.
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Posted by whisperinggums on February 10, 2024 at 3:05 AM
Me neither but I’ve always loved Ireland and chose it as a destination as part of my first trip to Europe, back in my late 20s. Still haven’t been to Scotland but will never forget Ireland.
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