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The Secret Scripture | Sebastian Barry | ....Complexity befalls this Irish-Catholic family....
 
 


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 The Secret Scripture  

The Secret Scripture
Sebastian Barry

Viking Adult, 2008 - 304 pages

average customer review:based on 14 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended



A gorgeous new novel from the author of the Man Booker finalist A Long Long Way

As a young woman, Roseanne McNulty was one of the most beautiful and beguiling girls in County Sligo, Ireland. Now, as her hundredth year draws near, she is a patient at Roscommon Regional Mental Hospital, and she decides to record the events of her life.

As Roseanne revisits her past, hiding the manuscript beneath the floorboards in her bedroom, she learns that Roscommon Hospital will be closed in a few months and that her caregiver, Dr. Grene, has been asked to evaluate the patients and decide if they can return to society. Roseanne is of particular interest to Dr. Grene, and as he researches her case he discovers a document written by a local priest that tells a very different story of Roseanne?s life than what she recalls. As doctor and patient attempt to understand each other, they begin to uncover long-buried secrets about themselves.

Set against an Ireland besieged by conflict, The Secret Scripture is an epic story of love, betrayal, and unavoidable tragedy, and a vivid reminder of the stranglehold that the Catholic Church had on individual lives for much of the twentieth century.


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Sebastian Barry makes the familiar new

The interesting thing about "The Secret Scripture" isn't its subject matter. That will seem familiar: Ireland in (primarily) the 20's and 30's: its poverty; its civil war; its small town secrets and cruelties; a cold and manipulative priest. Even the device of alternating the voices of the patient (Roseanne Clear) and the psychiatrist (Dr. Grene) has been
used by other writers, notably Pat Barker in the "Regeneration" trilogy.
What Barry does in his lyrical evocation of a particular place and time is to make the familiar seem utterly new. In part he does this through the use of conflicting narratives, the "official" record written by Fr Gaunt and the memories written down by Roseanne, a patient in a mental institution. In part, he does it through the way he draws lesser characters, like the McNulty mother and brothers. And he does it by the way he recreates the Irish landscape, as if no one had ever written about it before. The image of the Metal Man, pointing forever out to sea, is an indelible metaphor for the story of Roseanne Clear. I disagree with many of the assessments of this novel in other reviews on this site. For some the ending is too melodramatic, the narrator too unreliable, the plot too unconvincing. The memories of Roseanne Clear are reliable, convincing and compelling precisely because of her situtation. She's been locked away from the rest of the world for decades, with nothing to contemplate except the things that have happened to her. Her memory is undimmed because the events of ordinary life have not gotten in the way. It is as if she were gazing down through a clear pool at the same patch of sea floor; so well does she know it that she can see it in the most minute detail. You will not be disappointed by this novel.


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....Complexity befalls this Irish-Catholic family....

While Sebastian Barry is new to me, it didn't stop me from enjoying this book.

A great writer with a great story to tell.

The scene is set in the Irish-Catholic realm and features a highly devote family centering around Roseanne Clear, the daughter of a well-respected man named Joe. After a dark and cloudy night the family suffers some hardships and young Roseanne seeks to fly from her nest only to be stricken with more hardship.

....Complexity befalls this Irish-Catholic family....


Mixed feelings

I thought the first 100 pages of the novel were marvellous. The tale of the young Roseanne Clear as a little girl, as narrated by the 100 year old Roseanne in a mental asylum to her diary, is horrific, tragic, and sad. After these 100 pages, the story then starts to dawdle; the history of Roseanne Clear begin to jump around and become confusing. This confusion is deliberately set up by the author, to illustrate how unreliable the narrator is in her old age.

Authors employing the plot device of a unreliable witness to narrate the storyline is nothing new. However, I do find that Barry abused this technique in his writing. By using this plot device, Barry was absolved of explaining how the married Roseanne was voluntarily imprisoned in a hut, or why she chose to stay in the hut after being falsely accused of adultery, or why her husband and in-laws can believe the words of a single witness, or how her brother-in-law found her and impregnate her during one night of passion. If the narrator is truly unreliable because of her advanced age, how is she able to write her story in professorial prose? It seems that Barry is using the device of the unreliable narrator to escape of providing a coherent thread to Roseanne's life.

Forgetting the few gaps here and there, and on account of the superb but horrific first part of the novel, this novel is still a good read.


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Dark Irish tale of a 100-year-old woman that's good but too melodramatic

So many awful things happen to Roseanne McNulty, the protagonist of Sebastian Barry's Booker-shortlisted novel "The Secret Scripture," that at a certain point I couldn't help but look forward to more of them. McNulty's a century-old Irish woman who has been living at a mental hospital for so long that nobody can remember why she was sent there in the first place. A staff psychiatrist, Dr. Grene, undertakes an investigation to determine whether she had genuine mental problems or was institutionalized for "moral" reasons.

As her hospital and home for 50 years is being prepared for demolition, Roseanne tells her life story in longhand, hiding the pages under a floorboard. These passages alternate with the psychiatrist's "commonplace book," his observations from the ongoing investigation.

McNulty grows up Protestant among the Catholics of Sligo on Ireland's northwestern coast, raised by a gravedigger father and a mother he brought home from Southhampton, England. The family becomes caught in the Irish civil war in the early '20s, her father demoted to rat-catcher by the local Catholic priest after he asks him to give last rites to a rebel. Roseanne's mind obscures the worst of her life's tragedies by changing the details, as we learn later, but the ones she relates clearly are grim enough, as when her cherished father accidentally burns down an orphanage and kills 123 girls. Taking his demotion with aplomb, her father had devised his own method of dispatching rats: Dip each in paraffin, kill it with a conk on the head, then drop it into a fire. (It says a lot about Roseanne's childhood that she enjoys tagging along with her father on these jobs.) Unfortunately, step 2 really should follow step 1, as they discover when a paraffin-drenched rat escapes and scurries back into the orphanage, climbs down a chimney and catches fire. Father and daughter keep this mistake a secret between themselves.

The Catholic priest Father Gaunt is enormously cruel, dispensing moral decrees with absolute certainty to terrible effect in the life of Roseanne, whom he loathes for (a) being so beautiful she's a "mournful temptation" to the men of Sligo, and (b) refusing to convert when she weds a Catholic. After she's seen with another man in a suspicious but innocent circumstance, Gaunt succesfully pursues the annulment of her marraige with the Vatican, then icily relates the news:

If you had followed my advice, Roseanne, some years ago, and put your faith in the true religion, if you had behaved with the beautiful decorum of a Catholic wife, you would not be facing these difficulties. But I do appreciate that you are not entirely responsible. Nymphomania is of course by definition a madness.

More terrible things happen to Roseanne, of course, as likeable a long-suffering protagonist as Father Gaunt is despicable. Barry tells a larger story about Irish strife and the fallibility of history as filtered through human memory, but I don't know enough about Ireland to appreciate it fully. Though "The Secret Scripture" features two great characters and evocative writing, I'm surprised it rates the Booker shortlist and has become the betting favorite to win. The book's as melodramatic as a romance novel, though it's long on corpses, rats and dementia and short on heaving bodices.


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Cheated by the Ending

What a beautifully written novel. It's amazing how Barry made Roseanne such a wonderful, interesting character. But for me, the novel was ruined by a cheap, melodramatic ending. There was no need for it. Otherwise it would have been a 5.




reviews: page 1, 2, 3



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