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Talking About O'Dwyer

by C. K. Stead

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502539,579 (3.72)1
In his new bachelor flat, too close for comfort to his former family home, Mike Newall, Oxford don and Wittgenstein scholar seeks to rebuild his life, but feels increasingly weighed down by the past. When O'Dwyer, his colleague and follow expatriate New Zealander dies, Newall attends the funeral, and learns a secret about O'Dwyer.… (more)
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Not memorable, except that it contained a lot of Maori words. ( )
  edwinbcn | Feb 19, 2020 |
Talking About O'Dwyer is perhaps unique, in that it is a coming-of-age novel – a bildungsroman – but with a sixty-year-old man as the central character. It is about coming to terms with regrets of a life lived but not lived as you wanted it. It follows the anxieties of Mike, a New Zealand-born teacher at Oxford whose marriage has fallen apart and who still pines for the love of his youth: Marica, an enchanting but pensive daughter of Croatian immigrants who left him, became a doctor and married someone else. A parallel storyline follows the mystery of the recently deceased O'Dwyer, Mike's friend, who all his life was plagued by guilt over the death of one of his men in combat in World War Two. Both stories are told by Mike to his patient friend, Winterstoke.

The lives of these people (and there are a surprisingly large number of characters, given the book's short length) are complicated; they are all good people but are entangled, confused and beaten down by life's twists and turns. The novel follows Mike as he (not always consciously) tries to come to terms with his own decisions and emotions. The two main hurdles for this, for him and for the other characters, are identity and memory.

The overall tone of Talking About O'Dwyer is melancholy and perhaps a little bittersweet. The major strength of the novel is that author C. K. Stead's characters cannot be pigeon-holed; whilst they may on occasion behave world-weary, or say something jaded or cynical, these words cannot be used to define them. The same goes for when they act immaturely, spitefully, self-centredly, kind-heartedly, friendly, hopeful or any other word you might cherry-pick from a thesaurus to describe the myriad emotions humans go through. Stead's resolutions to his characters' conflicts are all about accepting life as it is, not as you wish it would be. This acceptance is reached through a mix of wry observation ("What sort of a life is it if you have nothing to regret?" (pg. 197)), hard-bitten stoicism ("[they] had been part of a bigger story which, when it went by the name of History, would attribute cause and perhaps apportion blame, but which to the participants was simply memory, or What Happened..." (pg. 224)) or by looking to the future, even in old age ("There was no going back. But sometimes there was such a thing as going forward." (pg. 189); "Take your time, brother. We're old men, and we have the summer before us." (pg. 14)).

This will be a thought-provoking novel for anyone given to introspection, or who struggles with the memory of past regrets and past mistakes (isn't that everyone?). The sometimes overtly philosophical bent of Talking About O'Dwyer thankfully never becomes didactic, and whilst it probably would become boring if it were a longer novel, Stead's brevity and his liberal splashes of humour make it a compelling and thoroughly worthwhile read. ( )
  MikeFutcher | Apr 12, 2017 |
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In his new bachelor flat, too close for comfort to his former family home, Mike Newall, Oxford don and Wittgenstein scholar seeks to rebuild his life, but feels increasingly weighed down by the past. When O'Dwyer, his colleague and follow expatriate New Zealander dies, Newall attends the funeral, and learns a secret about O'Dwyer.

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