A lyrical evocation of life in rural Ireland. Not so much a novel as a fictionalised (?) account of a year in a small farming community peopled with wonderfully eccentric characters, such as:
- Bill Evans was brought up by the church in an orphanage and then sent out to work for a farm as little more than a slave; he demands cigarettes and drinks from everyone he meets.
- John Quinn's fundamental philosophy is that the Lord intended men and women to copulate. His first wife bore him eight children, his second left him after which he contented himself with casual affairs; now he is seeking a third wife.
- Jamesie is a clown.
- The Shah owns the scrapyard and is the richest man in town but now wants to sell the business to the man who works for him despite the fact that they refuse to speaks to one another.
- Patrick travels across Ireland as a jobbing builder ... but has left one job unfinished for years.
- “A river of beaten copper ran sparkling from shore to shore in the centre of the lake. On either side of this bright river peppered with pale stars the dark water seethed. Far away the light to the town glowed in the sky. His own footsteps were loud. When he came to the corner of the lake, the heron rose out of the reeds to flap him lazily around the shore, ghostly in the moonlight. On such a night a man could easily want to run from his own shadow.” (pp 201 - 202)
- “Hundreds of daffodils and scattered narcissi met the spring again with beauty. Birds bearing twigs in their beaks looped through the air. The brooding swan resumed her seat on the high throne in the middle of the reeds. The otter paths between the lakes grew more beaten. In shallows along the shore the water rippled with a life of spawning pike and bream: in the turmoil their dark fins showed above the water and the white of their bellies flashed when they rolled. The lambs were now out with their mothers on the grass, hopping as if they had mechanical springs in their tiny hooves, sometimes leapfrogging one another.” (pp 250 - 251)
- “He was ... drawing in the cigarette smoke as if it were the breath of life, releasing it to the still air in miserly ecstasy.” (p 15)
- “Empty houses, falling down houses, one house on the mountain, its floor covered with rat traps, new bungalows full of children. Dreams in tatters with the 'For Sale’ sign at the gate.” (p 17)
- “We think the birds are singing when they are only crying ‘this is mine’ out of their separate territories.” (p 21)
- “As with many diminished people, Edmund’s response was to rephrase each thing the other person said in the form of a question.” (p 51)
- “He's still as thick and as ignorant as several double ditches.” (p 66)
- “I would not swap with a lord. We all want our own two shoes of life. If truth was told, none of us would swap with anybody. We want to go out the way we came in. It's just as well we have no choice. If there was a choice you'd have certain giddy outfits having operations to get themselves changed into other people like those sex change outfits you see in the newspapers.” (p 66)
- “Lies can walk while the truth stays grounded.” (p 98)
- “How can time be gathered in and kissed? There is only flesh.” (p 132)
- “Cattle round a bullying cow in the middle of a field would be more decent.” (p 199)
- “There are times I don't know who I am from one minute to the next. That's why I always liked the acting. You are someone else and always know what you are doing and why.” (p 214)
- “Anyone with livestock is going to have deadstock.” (p 265)



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