03/02/2015
O’Brien, who introduced an Irish female perspective to the 1960s literary landscape, has produced stories over the last half-century that resonate with charm and acerbity, lyricism and terseness, nostalgia and brute force. Her early stories depict an Ireland of isolated villages and poor mountain farms where, in a moment, dreams turn to hopelessness, innocence to shame. Autobiographical tales feature mothers recalling days in America, schoolgirls bristling at convent education, and country lasses escaping to London. In “Irish Revel,” a farm girl bicycles into town for a party only to find herself moving furniture and cooking dinner. In “Sister Imelda,” the title character returns from university lonely and apart, an exile “in the mind.” Spirited Eily of “A Scandalous Woman” ends up trapped in a spiritless marriage, and the protagonist of “The Conner Girls,” like Chekhovian figurines, are trapped by their own lack of will. “Mrs. Reinhardt” and “A Rose in New York” exemplify stories exploring relationships between women. Men are mostly observed by women, as in “The Love Object,” which details a London divorcée’s affair with a married man. “Brother” depicts a particularly vicious man through his sister’s murderous eyes. “The Shovel Kings” shows sympathy for Irish laborers in England. John Banville’s introduction to the collection highlights O’Brien’s technique as well as her Irish roots. The stories validate his admiration—O’Brien’s self-described gallery of “strange” and “sacrificial” Irish women is indispensable. (May)
"When a writer as gifted as O'Brien memorializes a vanishing world, we experience not only the 'lost landscape' but the richly ambivalent emotions it has evoked."—Joyce Carol Oates, Times Literary Supplement
"Every one of the stories included is a shining example of a master at work."—Lucy Scholes, Observer
As well as being an intensely enjoyable book, it is a very important publication in the history of Irish literature: the selected stories of one of the major writers of our era."—Eilis Ni Dhuibhne, Irish Times
"A career's selection of stories to savor.... Hers is not the sort of writing that indulges in what one story dismisses as 'clever words and hollow feelings'; her stories ask impossibly difficult questions about the nature of love and the possibility of happiness, and they refuse to settle for easy answers.... This collection positions O'Brien among the literary heavyweights, where it confirms she belongs."—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"O'Brien is an Irish natural treasure, having secured a place in the pantheon of top-notch twentieth-century Irish writers of fiction.... What we see now is what was always there, brilliant prose couched in extremely creative and greatly relevant story lines presenting well-understood and broadly understandable characters.... O'Brien succeeds with genius-level ingenuity in producing short stories achingly effective."—Brad Hooper, Booklist (starred review)
"Majestic, heart-crossed tales about women...marked by their modern sensibilities and indomitable spirits."—Elle
"Tales that gleam like rare artifacts."—Megan O'Grady, Vogue
"A cause for celebration."—Jane Ciabattari, BBC
"Majestic, heart-crossed tales."—Lisa Shea, ELLE.com
"In this landmark collection of short fiction, Irish master Edna O'Brien gorgeously explores the complexities of her characters and the land that engendered them."—Cathleen Medwick, More
"When O'Brien ranges farther into the lives of women and men, married and single, beyond the borders of Ireland, she describes longing and desire and the intricacies of love and adultery as keenly and memorably as any modern writer you'll read.... The lyrical turnings of her quest for truth, the deftness of her sentences and the clinical eye she turns on the imprisoning values of her country hark back to Joyce, modern Ireland's old artificer. All together, they make O'Brien the first female bard of the place she bitterly names as 'a land of shame, a land of murder, and a land of sacrificial women.' O'Brien's 84 now, and eventually she herself will be gone. But her stories will linger - not just smoldering, but burning as fiercely as when they first appeared."—Alan Cheuse, NPR
"The confidence and authority of Ms. O'Brien's writing, and the humor and sexiness that flow through it, mark her as a figure at the top of the food chain. The Love Object...consolidates this position. It's a book of deep and complicated and sometimes rude pleasures.... It's tempting to remark that sex and class and vanity and disappointment are Ms. O'Brien's central themes, but that's a hollow statement - those are all of our themes, mine at least, and probably yours, too. What matters is how consistently observant she is about them, how her sentences ring and ring again. There are echoes of James Joyce's stories and of William Trevor's, but the sound is unmistakably her own."—Dwight Garner, New York Times
"The Love Object is less a catalog than a kind of humanist Rosary-and each bead, each story, is a prayer, a meditation, a supplication, a lament, a confession. We rub the hard beads between soft fingers, not as a gesture of intellectual decoding, but as an act of sensing, feeling our way into O'Brien's created lives, the mysteries of common human experience, where the everyday is profound and gently affecting, and the profane becomes sacred."—Earl Pike, Cleveland Plain Dealer
"Brilliant and memorable.... There is a harmony among all these stories that makes a whole."
—John Casey, New York Times Book Review, "100 Notable Books of 2015"
"Gorgeous, meticulously rendered short stories, probing the psyches of an intriguing cast of widows, mistresses, sleepwalkers and nuns."—Sarah Meyer, Oprah.com
"Put on a pot of tea and curl up with The Love Object, the new collection of Edna O'Brien stories. If you're lucky, it'll be cold, damp and misty outside.... The Irish writer John Banville calls O'Brien 'the poet of vulnerability,' and while it's true that many of her characters are wounded, reading about them is often exhilarating because of her prodigious ability to capture both the beauty and the sorrows of the world."—Associated Press
"O'Brien writes like an angel.... There's a hint of William Trevor's Irish grimness in the background to these stories, a touch of Flann O'Brien's Irish madness, and more than a bit of Virginia Woolf's sensitivity to the stream of women's consciousness.... The Love Object demonstrates just how good Edna O'Brien is."—Joseph Bottum, Washington Free Beacon
"The Love Object is more than a short-story collection, it's an encyclopedia of perfect storytelling and a retrospective on the fifty-year career of a writer of exquisite finesse and pathos.... O'Brien has taken a great deal of time over these small works of art. They are finely wrought pieces with vivid details, sparingly rendered. The sentences are buffed to a polish, the symbolic images (a green georgette evening gown, a mossy cave, an undercooked fowl) so finely worked, their seams are invisible."—Jennifer Wilder, BookBrowse
"O'Brien's reputation as one of the greatest storytellers in modern literature is only strengthened by this volume's publication."—John G. Matthews, Library Journal
"Read a bunch of stories by the same writer, and you come away with a portrait of a mind in mosaic-if she's not much good, the cracks will soon show; if she is, you're privy to something exquisite. The latter is the case with The Love Object.... O'Brien's mastery reveals itself in any number of ways."—Alexandra Schwartz, New Yorker
"An Ireland gripped by tradition and change finds illumination in O'Brien's brilliant and memorable tales."—New York Times Book Review, "Editors' Choice"
"Finely wrought stories.... Especially good for fans of Alice Munro, William Trevor and Mavis Gallant."—Tom Beer, Newsday
"Doyenne or jezebel, Ireland's Edna O'Brien is a master.... The Love Object presents us with the very finest of her short stories-31 examples of her shimmering prose, spanning her career. Presented together in one volume, the end result is a staggering achievement: a masterclass in the form, each story a perfectly polished work of art, complete and fully realized on a miniature scale.... One of the wonderful things about The Love Object is how one can trace the developments in O'Brien's career through its pages, watching the subtle shift between these earlier narratives of female experience and her later work that addresses the broader issues of Irish history and politics."—Lucy Scholes, Daily Beast
"Story after marvelous story...."—Catherine Holmes, Post and Courier
"Fire-warmed Chekhovian realist fictions (though they are slyly experimental), which run the gamut from stories of class and romance to cautionary tales of sex and madness."—Jonathan Sturgeon, Flavorwire
"Honest, daring, thoughtful, eloquent, restless.... The Love Object was bound to be brilliant-these stories are for the most part known and loved. But reading them all together engages us in a lengthy, thoughtful dialogue between a brilliant mind and an interesting world. Not to be missed."—Jane Smiley, Philadelphia Inquirer
"So good!"—Carolina Herrera, Wall Street Journal
★ 2015-02-17
A career's selection of stories to savor.These 31 stories by O'Brien (The Country Girls Trilogy, 1986, etc.), spanning some four decades, are brought together in the sort of volume meant to establish a legacy and win prizes. The Irish-raised, London-based author hasn't been praised for her short stories with the same reverence as William Trevor or Alice Munro (the Nobel Prize winner who provides a rapturous blurb here, proclaiming that O'Brien writes "the most beautiful, aching stories of any writer, anywhere"). Perhaps her novels, memoir, and persona have distracted attention from her mastery of short fiction, which reveals itself over the course of this generous selection as the focus moves from Irish girlhood to the literary life in large, cosmopolitan cities. Not that these stories are necessarily autobiographical or that it even matters if they are. The power of the first-person narrative in a perfect, and perfectly wrenching, story such as "My Two Mothers" rings truer than a memoir might, as O'Brien describes a relationship with a mother who is somehow both lover and enemy, the breach caused when "I began to write," the story itself a meditation on life, literature, and "being plunged into the moiling seas of memory." Hers is not the sort of writing that indulges in what one story dismisses as "clever words and hollow feelings"; her stories ask impossibly difficult questions about the nature of love and the possibility of happiness, and they refuse to settle for easy answers. As she writes in "Manhattan Medley," a tale of infidelity in a city and a world filled with it, "the reason that love is so painful is that it always amounts to two people wanting more than two people can give." Beneath the veneer of sophistication in a story such as "Lantern Slides," the emotional ravages are as deep as in the hardscrabble stories of rural Ireland. With an introduction by John Banville and a dedication to Philip Roth, this collection positions O'Brien among the literary heavyweights, where it confirms she belongs.