A Goat's Song
by Dermot Healy
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How politics can break up a relationship. The setting is Northern Ireland, the protagonists a Protestant actress and a Catholic playwright. Not even sleeping together can bridge the gulf which the war has created between them. By the author of Banished Misfortune.Tags
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This is an unrelentingly bleak story about the failed love affair of an Irish Catholic writer, Jack, and an Irish Protestant actress, Catherine, who are separated by religion, background and an alcohol problem on either side.
The story is told by Jack in a retrospective fashion, starting at their breakup and moving back. It passes through their time together and then on to Catherine's childhood in which her father was a member of the Royal Ulster Constabulary who became the public face of brutality when he was filmed beating a protester.
The first quarter of the book...a long, drunken complaint by Jack...almost lost me. Fortunately, the middle part, which eventually tells the story of Catherine's father, arrived just in time. The switch show more from the account of what is, at its heart, simply an extended bender, to a look at the conflicts and turmoil of the Troubles was welcome. I came away from it sad, moved...and sorry to see it end. In the final quarter of the book, the reader sees the story circle back to join the beginning. Knowing what is coming, I felt this part held the reader suspended for too long.
In the end, I found Catherine unsympathetic and Jack even less so—but I would have loved the central story of her father bookended by a reduced version of their story. show less
The story is told by Jack in a retrospective fashion, starting at their breakup and moving back. It passes through their time together and then on to Catherine's childhood in which her father was a member of the Royal Ulster Constabulary who became the public face of brutality when he was filmed beating a protester.
The first quarter of the book...a long, drunken complaint by Jack...almost lost me. Fortunately, the middle part, which eventually tells the story of Catherine's father, arrived just in time. The switch show more from the account of what is, at its heart, simply an extended bender, to a look at the conflicts and turmoil of the Troubles was welcome. I came away from it sad, moved...and sorry to see it end. In the final quarter of the book, the reader sees the story circle back to join the beginning. Knowing what is coming, I felt this part held the reader suspended for too long.
In the end, I found Catherine unsympathetic and Jack even less so—but I would have loved the central story of her father bookended by a reduced version of their story. show less
Really great. I agree with that the most compelling character was Catherine's father. I'd rank it with Under the Volcano as one of the best books about alcoholism. It's about a lot more too.
Dermot Healy is one of Ireland's leading poets and authors. His books include Banished Misfortunes (stories), Fighting with Shadows, A Goat's Song and Sudden Times(novels), The Bend for Home (memoir), and The Ballyconnell Colours (poems). He has not yet attracted the international following his work merits, perhaps because his voice is strongly Irish, its wit and turn of language linked to place, the themes of his earlier books insular. He has also written and directed plays, including The Long Swim and On Broken Wings, and wrote the screenplay for Our Boys directed by Cathal Black.
My favorite of his novels is A Goat's Song. Set in Donegal, Ireland, it's the story of a love affair between a Catholic man and a Protestant woman. Bitter show more family jealousies and differences of background add to the difficulties of the relationship. Yet despite all the obstacles, at the heart of the book lies a celebration of love. A great read. show less
My favorite of his novels is A Goat's Song. Set in Donegal, Ireland, it's the story of a love affair between a Catholic man and a Protestant woman. Bitter show more family jealousies and differences of background add to the difficulties of the relationship. Yet despite all the obstacles, at the heart of the book lies a celebration of love. A great read. show less
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Dermot Healy was born in Finea, County Westmeath, Ireland on November 9, 1947. His first volume of short stories, Banished Misfortune, was published in 1982. He wrote several novels including A Goat's Song, Sudden Times, and Long Time, No See. He also wrote volumes of poetry including A Fool's Errand and a memoir entitled The Bend for Home. He won show more several literary prizes including the Hennessy, the Tom Gallon and the Encore. He also wrote and directed plays including The Long Swim and On Broken Wings. He was the ageing Irish emigrant narrator in Nichola Bruce's film, I Could Read the Sky in 1999. He died on June 29, 2014 at the age of 66. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Original publication date
- 1994
- First words
- The bad times were over at last. He stood on the new bridge that opened onto the Mullet and waited for Catherine to appear. In the side pocket of his jacket, folded into a notebook, he had her letter. Just when he'd given up ... (show all)hope it had arrived. she had written. The last time he'd heard her speak, her voice was a crackle of disembodiment, a screech of statis over the radio on the boat. Now her words were clear and purposeful. She was coming back to him -Chapter 1, Waiting for Catherine
- Canonical DDC/MDS
- 823.914
- Canonical LCC
- PR6058.E19
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- Members
- 228
- Popularity
- 142,556
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.30)
- Languages
- English, French, Norwegian (Bokmål), Norwegian
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 15
- ASINs
- 4




























































