Imatge de l'autor

Ruth Gilligan

Autor/a de The Butchers' Blessing

5 obres 244 Membres 17 Ressenyes

Obres de Ruth Gilligan

The Butchers' Blessing (2020) 107 exemplars
Nine Folds Make a Paper Swan (2016) 92 exemplars
Forget (2006) 18 exemplars
Can You See Me? (2009) 14 exemplars
Somewhere in Between (2007) 13 exemplars

Etiquetat

Coneixement comú

Data de naixement
1988
Gènere
female
Nacionalitat
Ireland
Lloc de naixement
Dublin, Ireland

Membres

Ressenyes

This was an interesting merger of three intertwining stories about Jewish characters who live in Ireland. In the first, a young girl believes her family is emigrating to America, but they end up in Ireland. The second is about a teenager who has been committed to an asylum because he has suddenly become mute. We find out later what happened to cause this, but it's a family secret that he refuses to reveal to the doctors and therapists. In the third story, a young Irish journalist has decided to convert to Judaism so that she can marry her boyfriend. All of them face challenges in confronting the expectations of family, religion, and Irish society. I found the book interesting but kept thinking about Roddy Doyle's wonderful collection of stories about immigrants to Ireland, [The Deportees and Other Stories], which was a 5-star read for me.… (més)
½
 
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Cariola | Hi ha 6 ressenyes més | Apr 21, 2024 |
WOW. I am stunned with how quickly I blew through this book. I think I just ignored my life for 24 hours and dove full-on into the lives of these characters. There is a strange, creepy vibe throughout the story that I am still feeling after finishing it, but instead of repulsing me I’m even more intrigued thinking about it. I’m SO happy I took the recommendation to read this (thanks Pam!) because it may be the best book I’ve read in years. A Also want to read everything this author ever writes... just beautifully crafted!… (més)
 
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Andy5185 | Hi ha 6 ressenyes més | Jul 9, 2023 |
Three stories that tell of a century of Jewish experiences in Ireland from different viewpoints. One a woman from Ireland whose boyfriend would like her to convert; the other a girl whose family accidently end up in Cork rather than New York and the last a Jewish man whose selective mutism has kept him in a mental institution for decades because of something he can't tell anyone. There is also a story of love and life and it's an interesting set of stories, that interweave in ways I wasn't expecting.
It took me a while to get into it and I'm not fond of the chapters cycling between eras way of telling a story but by the end I was very curious about it all.
… (més)
 
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wyvernfriend | Hi ha 6 ressenyes més | May 24, 2023 |
How far back in the past should a novel take us for it to be considered “historical fiction”? Ruth Gilligan’s The Butchers is set in the rural borderlands of Ireland in 1996, at a time when a widespread outbreak of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), commonly known as “mad cow disease”, was threatening to scupper the British, and then, eventually, the Irish beef industry. That was less than three decades ago, and yet it already seems a different era, one which Gilligan accurately and authentically evokes through contemporary references: Euro 1996 football games were showing on TV, the Spice Girls were assailing the charts, recent legislative enactments had decriminalized homosexuality and just introduced divorce.

The Butchers is grounded in the reality of living in Ireland in the 90s, but, strikingly, it is also built on a supernatural or mythological premise referring to a curse supposedly lain on Ireland by a “farmer’s widow” of olden times:

... since the war had claimed all eight of her men She decreed, henceforth, no man could slaughter alon; Instead, seven others had to be by his side to stop the memory of her grief from dying too...

According to the ancient Irish custom, there had to be eight men present at every cattle slaughter; eight different hands touching the animal’s hide as it passed from this life to the next. So now eight Butchers spent eleven months of the year calling on the few families around the country who still believed, and killing their beasts in the traditional, curse-abiding way...


The novel revolves around a number of characters who are, in some way or another, connected to the Butchers or their beliefs. There’s Grá, the long-suffering wife of one of the Eight, and her twelve-year old daughter Úna; there’s Fionn, a small-time farmer with demons in his past and a wife with a debilitating tumour; there’s Fionn’s teenage son Davey, who has heard of the Butchers from his mother and wants her to meet them to satisfy her dying wish.

In the brave new world of 1996 Ireland, the Butchers seem increasingly out of place and, as the BSE crisis escalates they are also viewed with suspicion by the non-believers. So when one of the Eight is found dead in a slaughterhouse, hanging by his feet on a meat hook suspended from the ceiling, the Butchers feel it is time for them to quit. Úna’s dreams of following in her father’s footsteps seem shattered… Or perhaps not. Twenty-two years after these calamitous events, a photograph appears on a New York gallery wall showing the Butcher’s hanging body. How has it ended up there and what fresh light will it shed on this “cold case”? It will be up to Úna to solve the mystery and avenge the man’s death.

The Butchers is, first and foremost, a great story, brilliantly told. It is tautly plotted, revealing its secrets in unexpected twists. The frequent changes in points of view introduce variety and keep up the momentum. It’s been some time since I read such a page turner.

But this is just one aspect of this book. It is, in fact, a novel of many parts, combining as it does a generally realistic storyline with elements of supernatural and crime fiction. Davey’s studies of classical mythology also serve as an excuse to introduce a symbolical subtext where references to myths reflect certain plot elements (to be honest, I found this to be rather heavy-handed and the least appealing ingredient in the book)

However, if I were pressed to pigeon-hole this genre-bending book, I would say it strikes me as primarily a coming-of-age novel. We see Úna growing up as a rebel against the patriarchal expectations of society; Davey coming to terms with his identity and sexuality; their parents questioning the choices they made when they were their children’s age. Equally importantly, this is a novel about the coming of age of a nation: contemporary Ireland. Gilligan’s portrayal of this rapidly changing country is deliciously ambivalent. Whilst on the one hand new civil rights were being introduced, and this is positively portrayed in the novel, the country was also being overwhelmed by a capitalist culture where money ruled, connections between politics and business were the order of the day and traditions were being forgotten.

Several recent novels have used folklore and the otherworldly to address present-day themes. This might explain, for instance, why witches have become such a potent and frequent feminist symbol in contemporary fiction. With its nods to the supernatural, The Butchers could be seen as the latest addition to this phenomenon – but it certainly stands out both in ideas and in their execution.

https://endsoftheword.blogspot.com/2020/01/the-butchers-ruth-gilligan-review.htm...
… (més)
1 vota
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JosephCamilleri | Hi ha 6 ressenyes més | Feb 21, 2023 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
5
Membres
244
Popularitat
#93,239
Valoració
½ 3.6
Ressenyes
17
ISBN
30
Llengües
3

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