Walk the Blue Fields

by Claire Keegan

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Claire Keegan's brilliant debut collection, Antarctica, was named a Los Angeles Times Book of the Year and earned her resounding accolades on both sides of the Atlantic. She continues her outstanding work with this new collection of quietly wrenching stories of despair and desire in modern-day Ireland. In "The Long and Painful Death," a writer awarded a stay to work in Heinrich Böll's old cottage has her peace interrupted by an unwelcome intruder whose ulterior motives emerge as the night show more progresses. In the title story, a priest waits at the altar to perform a marriage - and battles his memories of a love affair that led him to question all to which he has dedicated his life. And in "Dark Horses," a man seeks solace at the bottom of a bottle as he mourns both his empty life and his lost love. A masterful portrait of a country wrestling with its past and of individuals struggling toward their futures, Walk the Blue Fields is a breathtaking collection from "that rarest of writers - someone I will always want to read," and a resounding articulation of all the yearnings of the human heart (Irish Times). show less

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21 reviews
Claire Keegan’s tightly constructed short stories never cease to enthrall me. This collection poses no exception. Each story takes its own life. They do not take long to read, but oh, they take long to ponder! A couple of these stories are in other collections, but each one provided a treat at the end of a workday.

My favorite in this anthology is the last story: “Night of the Quicken Trees.” It tells of two misanthropes who live next door to each other in Clare, Ireland. Each have their respective inner demons, but they uncork a strange form love with each other. They even reconcile themselves, in a small way, with their social world of their nearby town. Will their bliss last, or will their paranoia win out in the end? As always show more in Keegan’s writing, the narrative only resolves on the last page. Only the last paragraph brings every detail of the short story into harmony, and the characters become all too human. show less
A book of short stories by the author of [Small Things Like These]. As is so often the case with short stories, my rating of each differs. Some stories, like " The Parting Gift" and " The Forester's Daughter" were very touching and fascinating, even shocking, while others were less engaging and left me puzzled as to their meaning. Overall, a good read. All left me thinking.

Recommended.
½
Claire Keegan is an amazing writer. This is one of her earlier published collections of short stories, and I found some of the stories a bit more depressing than others. Some broke my heart. Some gave me hope. They are all beautifully written.
A tender speech is combing through the willows. In a bare whisper, the elms lean. Something about the place conjures up the ancient past: the hound, the spear, the spinning wheel.

She believed that in every conversation, an invisible bowl existed. Talk was the art of placing decent words into the bowl and taking others out. In a loving conversation, you discovered yourself in the kindest possible way, and at the end the bowl was, once again, empty.

Highly recommended, if you can handle the darkness show more in many of these. show less
½
I've found a new Irish writer to follow in Claire Keegan. This is a lovely collection of seven melancholy stories, most of them set in rural Ireland. The main character in each story is haunted by tragedy--a lost love, a missed opportunity, a broken family, a dead child, a loveless marriage--and all but one (Margaret, in the final story, "Night of the Quicken Trees") seems stuck in that thin space between hope and despair, wanting to change the future but afraid to take that necessary step forward. A priest officiates at the marriage of the girl he loved (loves?) and for whom he began to question his vows. A man brings home a found dog in hopes of selling it--until his daughter assumes it is her birthday gift. A wild, outcast woman show more settles into a home she inherited from her cousin-lover-priest, haunted by a tragic affair that ended in crib death and wondering if she has enough time left for a second chance. A drunk remembers the girl he might have married. A gay man visits his mother and stepmother in Florida and leaves on his own terms. While the stories are all somewhat "blue," there is also enough humor to keep the melancholy from slipping over into the maudlin. And the writing is just exquisite. While the stories are decidedly Irish in nature, they are also universal.

Highly recommended for lovers of Ireland, lovers of short stories, and lovers of beautiful writing. A pitch perfect collection that will do it's magic on your emotions.
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½
Unlike Claire Keegan’s Small Things Like These and Foster, Walk the Blue Field isn’t a book to read when you’re pretty depressed. This collection of short stories ranges from melancholy to painful: a traumatized girl leaving for America, the breakdown of a mismatched couple’s marriage, a bride filled with regrets — it’s a much less hopeful Ireland. As always Keegan, crafts perfect stories, without a single word out of place. But I think what was out of place was me. Perhaps when I’m a bit stronger I will try again.
Excellent collection of Irish short fiction---stunning prose, sharply drawn characters (women mostly), and some original twists on familiar themes. Not exactly interconnected, but easy to read in succession, which I do not often find true of such anthologies. The final selection, "Night of the Quicken Trees" is one of the best, and most unusual, love stories ever, with overtones of ancient magic. Highly recommended.
“There’s pleasure to be had in history. What’s recent is another matter and painful to recall.” ( from the story “Walk the Blue Fields”)

Walk the Blue Fields by Claire Keegan is a collection of seven stories revolving around the themes of loss, regret, missed opportunities, and loneliness. From forbidden love, unhappy marriages and child abuse to gender identity, infidelity and misogyny- these stories explore some of the most complex aspects of human relationships and behavior. The tone of most of these stories borders on melancholic. Few authors can depict raw human emotion with such eloquence as Claire Keegan. Keegan’s characters are real and relatable – in their flaws, in their virtues and their simplicity. At this show more point after reading so many of this author’s works, I associate Claire Keegan with her clear, elegant and dream-like quality of writing, vivid imagery and deeply evocative stories. I am happy to say that with this collection, the author does not disappoint.

The first story, "The Parting Gift" is about a young girl preparing to leave her home and family in Ireland. As she prepares to leave for America, her memories take her back to a lifetime of abuse and neglect and we know that she will never willingly return to this life. The title story “Walk the Blue Fields” revolves around a priest, unable and unwilling to break his vows for the woman he loves, who ends up officiating her marriage. “Dark Horses” sees a man lamenting the loss of a good woman whom he has driven away with his thoughtless, misogynistic behavior. In “The Forester's Daughter” a man brings home a dog he finds in the forest which his daughter mistakenly assumes is a birthday gift for her. I had previously read The Foresters Daughter ( which was published as a solo edition by Faber and Faber. You can read my review here .) Another story, “Close to the Water's Edge”, with some variation, appears in Keegan’s “Antarctica”, another of her short story collections. Here we meet a young gay man who celebrates his birthday with his mother and homophobic stepfather – a celebration he exits when the indirect slurs become too much to bear. “Surrender(After McGahern)” is the story of a police sergeant who is unwilling to commit to the woman with whom he has been in a relationship. When she sends him a letter stating her intention to end their relationship, he devours a crate of oranges ( an act of solace or self-indulgence?) before he decides to “surrender”. The final story in the collection, "Night of the Quicken Trees" incorporates folklore, Irish superstitions and magical realism in a tale about an unlikely relationship between a superstitious woman and her neighbor, a loner who lives with his goat.

“Putting the past into words seemed idle when the past had already happened. The past was treacherous, moving slowly along. It would catch up in its own time. And in any case, what could be done? Remorse altered nothing and grief just brought it back.” ( from the story "Night of the Quicken Trees")

I will not rate these stories separately because I found each one to be special in its own way, which is rare in a short story collection. At the end of the book, Keegan includes a brief segment on the folklore, specific terminology and geography featured in some of the stories. I would recommend reading that part before reading the stories.

I absolutely loved this collection of short stories. A must-read for fans of this immensely talented writer.
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Author Information

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16+ Works 8,970 Members
Claire Keegan comes from County Wicklow. She has won several awards for her work including the William Trevor Prize, the Martin Healy Prize, the Francis MacManus Award, the Tom Gallon Award, the Kilkenny Prize, the Olive Cook Award, the Hugh Leonard Bursary, the Macaulay Fellowship, and the Rooney Prize for Irish Literature. She was also a Wingate show more scholar. Her debut, Antarctica, was a Los Angeles Times Book of the Year. She lives in rural Ireland show less

Some Editions

Kelly, Aidan (Narrator)
McMahon, Aoife (Narrator)
Quinn, Aidan (Narrator)
וולק, ארז (Translator)

Awards and Honors

Work Relationships

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Walk the Blue Fields
Original publication date
2007
Important places
Ireland
Dedication
For Jim and Claire
Blurbers
O'Connor, Joseph; Gurría-Quintana, Ángel; Mantel, Hilary; Gormley, Aedin; Enright, Anne; Ford, Richard
Disambiguation notice
The 2008 edition of this collection of short stories includes one story ("The Long and Painful Death") that is not included in the 2007 edition.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.914Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991945-1999
LCC
PR6061 .E329 .W35Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1961-2000
BISAC

Statistics

Members
532
Popularity
55,917
Reviews
21
Rating
(3.88)
Languages
8 — English, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
23
ASINs
5