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Wild Decembers (1999)

by Edna O'Brien

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313689,077 (3.42)24
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Starred review from April 3, 2000
The wild Irish humor and savage Irish melancholy that are both legend and stereotype receive exemplary treatment in this powerful novel by the prolific O'Brien (Down by the River; Time and Tide; Lantern Slides). Scenic Western Ireland is the setting for her tale, and particularly Cloontha, a village snug against a mountain where "lust for a lip of land" has set "warring sons of warring sons" against one another for centuries. Bachelor Joseph Brennan and his young sister, Breege, have never left their family acreage; Mick Bugler is newly arrived from Australia to claim adjacent land inherited from an uncle. They meet amicably when Mick's tractor gets stuck in Joe's farmyard, but their budding friendship soon sours, even as Breege, secretly smitten with the handsome newcomer, tries to pacify her irascible brother. The tractor, a novelty in the area, is dubbed Dino the Dinosaur by one of a notorious pair of sisters, Reena, "a child of nature," and Rita, a conniving slut. Their seduction of Bugler in order to obtain a free load of hay is exuberantly erotic, but this episode does not deflect the reader's woeful sense of foreboding about the growing conflict over territory between Joe and Bugler. Bugler admits he has a fiancee in Australia, so Joe is increasingly distraught as he senses and fears the halting romance between his innocent sister and the man he considers "the despoiler." The climate, the landscape, the history, all so deeply ingrained in the native Irish psyche, underscore the suspense. Remaining unflinchingly true to her characters, O'Brien allows the inevitable tragedy to play itself out, evincing the pity and terror of classical drama. 5-city author tour.

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"With a mood akin to WUTHERING HEIGHTS—and indeed the spirit of Emily Bronte" (Irish Times), Edna O'Brien's critically acclaimed novel WILD DECEMBERS charts the quick but sure demise of relations between "the warring sons of warring sons." Here in the countryside of western Ireland, "ancient feuds, romantic passions, and misguided ideas of fidelity blend together in . . . [a] heartbreaking story" (Wall Street Journal) leavened by the human comedy of which O'Brien rarely loses sight. A sister, a brother, and a stranger converge in a classic triangle, proceeding inevitably "toward a climax that is Irish to the quick, violent and sad and, in a strange way, beautiful. Just like the novel itself" (Washington Post).

WILD DECEMBERS is a triumphant work from a writer who wears well the mantle of her Irish forebears and yet who, with each new novel, breaks new ground all her own. In this, her latest, "readers could not ask for a more profoundly satisfying book" (Boston Herald).

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» See also 24 mentions

English (5)  German (1)  All languages (6)
Showing 5 of 5
(blank)
  repechage | Dec 26, 2024 |
Her style of writing is different from a traditional narrative but it soon captured me and the story was enveloping. ( )
  pattiphelps | Aug 28, 2016 |
Another of my favorite Irish writers is Edna O’Brien born in 1930 in County Clare. She is a novelist, a poet, a playwright, and short story writer. Her first novel, The Country Girl, dealt with woman and their repression during the period following World War II. The book was banned, burned, and denounced from the pulpits. As a result, she left Ireland, and now lives in London. Among her admirers, she counts Philip Roth and the former President of Ireland, Mary Robinson.

Wild Decembers, published in 1999, continues the all-too-frequently told sad story of woman in Ireland. Joseph Brennan owns a sizeable piece of land adjoining that of Mick Bugler. Mick left Ireland to open a sheep station in Australia, and he made a nice fortune in the process. He met Rosemary there, and promised to marry her once he established a farm back in Ireland. One of the first things he does is buy a tractor, which, aside from the noise, aggravates a lot of the local farmers – partly through jealousy and partly through their cantankerous nature.

Joseph Brennan runs a prosperous farm with his sister, Breege. He also rents land from surrounding owners for grazing and cutting of peat. When Mick offers more money for access to these lands, Brennan’s ire slowly rises to the boiling point. A series of lawsuits threatens to bankrupt Brennan. To complicate matters, Breege has fallen in love with Mick, and they begin an affair. Joe tries to keep the two apart without much success. Then, one day, Rosemary appears at Mick’s farm.

Bugler hosts a dinner at his farm, and it falls to him to be “the mother” and serve the stew. O’Brien writes, “Sleeves raised, he ladles the stew onto the upheld plates. Says he can’t be too particular as to who does or does not like onions. Give them to your neighbor. Old Bill Muggavin with no teeth walks around looking for a place and tells the floating streamers that he lost his clock fifteen years ago. Words of praise for Bugler’s expertise. Comes from being on a sheep station. Fifty men in the mess. Half and hour at most for lunch or dinner. Lambs and sheep in their thousands, waiting. Funny you never got hitched up, Mick. From Josephine. Doesn’t answer. Rosemary’s face becoming fainter with the passing days. Not able to summon her up the way he used to, lying in his quarters at night, her photograph falling out of the last letter. Rebuke” (31-32).

O’Brien does it all here, the quirky characters, pub fights, jealous neighbors, scheming men, and woman, and always the story which takes a conversation off on a tangent. Edna O’Brien has written dozens of books, including a biography of Joyce and a fictionalized account of the great romantic poet, Lord Byron. But Wild Decembers is a wee book, and fine, fine place to start your exploration of this first rate Irish writer.

--Jim, 11/9/13 ( )
  rmckeown | Aug 10, 2016 |
The story takes place in the west of Ireland. On a windswept mountain, Mick Bugler has come to claim his inheritance - land left to him by an uncle who has recently died. The land borders on that belonging to Joseph Brennan and his sister Breege. What starts out as having the beginning of friendship soon deteriorates as Bugler claims more and more of the adjoining land as rightfully belonging to him. Feuding has been the lot of the Buglers and the Brennans for over a hundred years, and as the story unfolds the reader knows that things are not going to change. In Romeo and Juliet fashion, Bugler and Breege fall in love, adding fuel to the hatred growing within Joseph.

This is my first book by O'Brien. I thought the writing was lovely, and I found the book hard to put down once I got into it. I didn't love the book, but will definitely try another by this author.

Read May 2014 ( )
  NanaCC | Jul 26, 2015 |
I couldn't get into it at all. I gave up. ( )
  fross | Aug 3, 2011 |
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Starred review from April 3, 2000
The wild Irish humor and savage Irish melancholy that are both legend and stereotype receive exemplary treatment in this powerful novel by the prolific O'Brien (Down by the River; Time and Tide; Lantern Slides). Scenic Western Ireland is the setting for her tale, and particularly Cloontha, a village snug against a mountain where "lust for a lip of land" has set "warring sons of warring sons" against one another for centuries. Bachelor Joseph Brennan and his young sister, Breege, have never left their family acreage; Mick Bugler is newly arrived from Australia to claim adjacent land inherited from an uncle. They meet amicably when Mick's tractor gets stuck in Joe's farmyard, but their budding friendship soon sours, even as Breege, secretly smitten with the handsome newcomer, tries to pacify her irascible brother. The tractor, a novelty in the area, is dubbed Dino the Dinosaur by one of a notorious pair of sisters, Reena, "a child of nature," and Rita, a conniving slut. Their seduction of Bugler in order to obtain a free load of hay is exuberantly erotic, but this episode does not deflect the reader's woeful sense of foreboding about the growing conflict over territory between Joe and Bugler. Bugler admits he has a fiancee in Australia, so Joe is increasingly distraught as he senses and fears the halting romance between his innocent sister and the man he considers "the despoiler." The climate, the landscape, the history, all so deeply ingrained in the native Irish psyche, underscore the suspense. Remaining unflinchingly true to her characters, O'Brien allows the inevitable tragedy to play itself out, evincing the pity and terror of classical drama. 5-city author tour.

. HTML:

"With a mood akin to WUTHERING HEIGHTS—and indeed the spirit of Emily Bronte" (Irish Times), Edna O'Brien's critically acclaimed novel WILD DECEMBERS charts the quick but sure demise of relations between "the warring sons of warring sons." Here in the countryside of western Ireland, "ancient feuds, romantic passions, and misguided ideas of fidelity blend together in . . . [a] heartbreaking story" (Wall Street Journal) leavened by the human comedy of which O'Brien rarely loses sight. A sister, a brother, and a stranger converge in a classic triangle, proceeding inevitably "toward a climax that is Irish to the quick, violent and sad and, in a strange way, beautiful. Just like the novel itself" (Washington Post).

WILD DECEMBERS is a triumphant work from a writer who wears well the mantle of her Irish forebears and yet who, with each new novel, breaks new ground all her own. In this, her latest, "readers could not ask for a more profoundly satisfying book" (Boston Herald).

.

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