Life
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[ top ] Criticism
[ top ] Commentary [ top ] [q.auth.],The Prospect of (Scandalous) Old Age [interview article], in Books Ireland (Sept. 1999), pp.2009-10. Boylan relates that her father was manic depressive; speaks of researching the story and using a lot of case studies to recreate the drama of Dicks vilent behaviour; regardings the writing of the book as both painful and healing. [q.auth.], review of Home Rule (1992), in Irish Times (13 June 1992), [q.p.]; the story of an ill-matched pair - Mama and Papa Devlin - in the 1890s, who are to become the grandparents of Nan Cantwell, the central character in Boylans first novel, Holy Pictures. [ top ] [q.auth.], review of Home Rule (1992) in Times Literary Supplement (12 June 1992), [q.p.]; relates that the lives of the young Devlin girls are dominated by their English Mama ... [who] succumbs to Pa Devlin but regrets it ever afterwards ... lives surrounded by relics of her refined past ... lavishes love on her three sons but has no time for her six daughters ... extracts them from school [at] thirteen ... to keep house for her. Daisy escapes to a convent, loses her faith, falls in love with her future husband Cecil Cantwell. / Plot moves at cracking pace, child abuse, death, attempted suicide, rape swirl past in single paragraphs ... delightful escapist romp ... the sequel has just been reissued by Penguin and there is scope for conquers. [ top ] Brian Fallon, review of Home Rule, in Irish Times (1 May 1993), [q.p.]; almost a family novel in the old sense, set in pre-independence Ireland and taking pains to reconstruct an authentic period feeling. Fiancés die in India, family cupboards usually have skeletons in them, respectability rules all and sundry. In the final pages the British leave Dublin Castle and one of the characters leaves for England, while another vanishes; the overall impression, however, is rather cosy, like a certain kind of genre painting, or old family photos turned nostalgically golden-yellow. [ top ] [Interview], You follow the bubble wherever it takes you, in Books Ireland (Sept. 2003), p.183-84. Claims to share birthdate as well as initials with Charlotte Brontë; [...] when I discovered the fragment which Charlotte had simple titled Emma, I was mildly put out to find a narrator, a calm-sounding lady close to middle-years, standing between me and the young heroine; but Mrs. Chalmont became a vivid and sympathetic character almost as soon as I picked up my pen.; novel concerns child delivered to failing girls school where it is assumed that her wealthy parents will improve its fortunes, but the girl turns out to be other than expected; raising questions of child-abduction and child-prostitution; recalls that Charlotte Brontë held the hand of a woman about to be hanged for the murder of her child in Newgate; novel set in year of Great Exhibition; Boylan toured London with her own personal guide during research; studied Brontë style in some deetail; has worked on a play about her marriage to Arthur Bell Nichols; She was a very distinctive sytlist and a great setter of characters, and the only writer I know who can combine irony and melodrama. She and her sisters were said to have been greatly influenced by Byron, but to me the rhymthm of her writing is more reminiscent of Shakespeare. Also, theres a nursery story-telling element [...] I tried to capture all of these [...]; rewrote the novel to accommodate influence of her reading of the earlier Brontë fragment, The Story of Willie Ellin; the resulting incorporating four pages of Brontës prose unadulterated; American publisher has paid $400,000 for Emma Brown; bought little house in Brittany. [ top ] Notes [ top ] Write Now: Contrib. Declans Chair, short story, to The Irish Times, 2nd Dec. 2000, Weekend, p.11; bio-data cites six novels between Holy Pictures (1982) and Room for a Single Lady (1997); and collections, A Nail in the Head (1983), Concerning Virgins (1989), That Bad Woman (1995); Collected Stories (Abacus 2000); also ed. The Agony and the Ego: Essays on the Art and Strategy of Fiction Writing, and The Literary Companion to Cats. [ top ] Beloved Stranger (2000): When her husband turns into a manic-depressive and is committed to a mental hospital, a wife reinvents herself in a world where women are no longer submissive and discovers much about her 50-year traditional and loveless marriage; a daugher, in response to what she has seen, remains herself unmarried; a dark and powerful novel includes a frightening description of the husbands descent into madness. (Adapted from review by Eoghan Corry, at IVenus.com [online]) [ top ] |