Blame my errant imagination.
As I read "Glorious Exploits," a new novel by Irish writer Ferdia Lennon, I kept hearing Roddy Doyle. Not that Lennon is copying Doyle's distinctive Irish patter, but the way the two main characters spoke and approached life conjured Doyle's Barrytown Trilogy, specifically "The Commitments." Jimmy Rabbitte's mission is to bring the soul music of Sam Cooke, Wilson Pickett, and Otis Redding to 1990 working-class Dublin. The mission is doomed from the start but boy is it a fun ride.
In "Glorious Exploits," unemployed potters Lampo and Gelon want to stage a Euripides play in 412 BCE in Seracuse, Sicily (Syracuse now. in both Sicily and N.Y.). They decide to enlist a cast of starving Athenian warriors whose invasion has been defeated and the captured, starving, warriors imprisoned in a dismal rock quarry. Why starving Athenian players? Because the duo's favorite poet is Euripides of Athens and these Athenians are the only ones in Seracuse and they just happen to know The Master's latest work that includes Medea and The Trojan Women. Their quest is doomed, of course. But boyo, it's a fun ride, no bollix.
Irish writers tingle my Irish genes. I have never been to my grandfather's country nor to his rural county of Roscommon. But I've read their best writers and they live in me. Doyle, Yeats, Maeve Binchy, Flann O'Brien, James Joyce all tell wonderful stories grounded in Irish wit and lore. The Irish story is riven with heartache. The latest Irish-set movie, "The Banshees of Inisherin," focuses on a long male friendship that breaks up for unfathomable reasons and leads to tragedy in 1923. There are laugh-out-loud moments, a dose of charm, memorable Celtic music, and then the ending when doom shows up. Meanwhile, the Irish Civil War, where neighbor kills neighbor, wages across the newly-formed country. These two friends' relationship is doomed. But the telling is marvelous.
It's the voice, nurtured over the centuries. Lennon has found it. In an interview, he says that he wanted to make sure that the book did not have that Merchant Ivory voice of serious dramas of the Classical Age. He succeeded. Lampo and Gelon are Sicilian-Irishmen on a lark, spending most of their time chatting over flasks of suspect wine at Dismas's place. Must hand it to Lennon. Many sickening things going on in Seracuse. Wine is the only answer. But the author describes in detail the wine they drink and you will thank Dionysus for the local Tiki Bar (we have several here in Ormond Beach). It's illuminating to hear lines of Euripides from the lips of emaciated Athenians, all wearing leg shackles, dressed in ill-fitting costumes and gowns. There is a performance and I won't tell you how it ends once the curtainless stage is cleared. And there is a surprise ending which is very sweet.
I have to admit that the book's cover grabbed me. It's a traditional bust of the historian and philosopher Herodotus with googly eyes.
Lennon was the subject of a Q&A
interview in the Aug. 31, 2024, Observer. I include an excerpt here because it
speaks to Ireland’s rich literary tradition and info about how contemporary
Irish writers are supported by their Arts Council. I worked with writers for 25
years at the Wyoming Arts Council and for two years assisted with creative
writing fellowships at the National Endowment for the Arts in D.C. It’s
instructional in a time when the NEA, the NEH, and the Institute of Museums and
Library Services are under the gun by Trump, Musk, and their techie minions who
wouldn’t know James Joyce unless you wacked them on the head with a hardcover edition
of “Ulysses.”
The Guardian's book critic wrote a review of "Glorious Exploits." Header: "Uproarious am-dram in ancient Sicily." I had to look up am-dram and it's British slang for amateur drama, those plays put on by your local community theatre.
From the Guardian:
Q: How do you explain the current wave of successful Irish novelists? A: I remember that when I was a student, James Joyce’s house was five minutes up
the road: just seeing that plaque, there’s something nice about having that
literary history celebrated around you. On a practical level, the
structures in Ireland make it easier for writers. An Arts Council grant helped
me write this book. I wasn’t in any way established, but you could submit a
work in progress to a panel of your peers and if you’re lucky, you might get
money that will give you a couple of months that could be
the break. I feel part of the burgeoning moment in Irish literature has to
do with the financial crash. A whole generation was devastated, in Ireland
maybe more than most. There were no jobs, so you felt freer to do what
you wanted, even if it made no money; I started writing in Granada [in
Spain] while unemployed.