By Tracey Lange
- Pub Date: 2021
- Genre: Irish Fiction
- Where I
boughtobtained this book: A Little Free Library in the Wrigleyville section of Chicago
- Why I
boughtobtained this book: My mother was a Brennan from the drumlins and lakes of County Monaghan
******
Based on the blurbs on the novel's cover and comments from friends who have read it, I was thinking I may not like this book. "It's a lot of family drama and bad choices," said one.
So I was expecting something overtly dramatic, with a soap-opera vibe.
But it was none of that. Instead, I got a story with solid writing, well-defined characters, familiar settings, and tales of family love, lore, and longing.
In short, I liked it. I really liked it.
Oh, it had some questionable plot twists. When the big secret was reveled, the story just kept going, heading for another big reveal. As one character said, he didn't want to see another potential "emotional mess ... just when they were past the worst of it."
And neither of those secrets was a surprise; indeed, you wondered why the close-knit Brennans hadn't already figured them out.
As the novel opens, we find Sunday, the only girl in an Irish-American clan with three brothers, needing help. Five years before, she moved from the family home in Westchester County, N.Y., for Los Angeles. She left behind a devoted fiancé -- considered to already be an honorary Brennan; an elderly, widowed father; and three brothers, including Denny, considered the alpha male. Why she left is the first big mystery.
But now, she finds herself lost in LA, with a crappy job, a lousy apartment, and a drunken driving charge.
She heads back home, and as she gets re-acquainted with the family, we learn their ways. Their stories are told in chapters by a narrator who knows them intimately and can see inside their heads. It's a fine way to tell the tale from all sides
It's a good family tale, even if, sometimes, you just want to give them a well deserved dope slap.
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