Blurb
One of Ireland's best-loved novelists returns
with a haunting novella of love, loss and memory
Flora's father has been killed in the Battle of El Alamein, one of the many victims of the Second World War. For Flora and her mother, life will never be the same again.
Now, it's just Flora - and Nellie, the family's life-long housekeeper - left; to reminisce in old age, and what really happened between Flora and her brother, Eddie, at the end of that long Irish summer.
Appearing now with Jennifer Johnston's classic novel, TWO MOONS
In a house overlooking Dublin Bay, Mimi and her daughter Grace are disturbed by the unexpected arrival of Grace's daughter and her boyfriend. While Grace's visitors focus her attention on an uncertain future, Mimi must begin to set herself to rights with the betrayals and disappointments of the past.
Reviews
Naming the Stars
A
story about the price and consequences of promises kept and shared.
This
is a deeply sad story, even if it doesn’t quite read that way. Flora and Nellie
only rarely, and for short periods of time, allow the heartache each of them
experienced to colour their moments. Most of the time they float along on a
stream of long established habits; pushing away thoughts and truths that might
disturb their quiet existence.
On
the night described in this novella, they commemorate the last time they saw
Eddie, decades earlier. He was Flora’s brother and Nellie’s secret crush and
betrayed both of them in ways he was unaware of, shaping their lives while he
threw his own life away. This night, for reasons that are neither explained nor
obvious, they share their feelings and secrets, almost destroying the decades
long and mostly artificial equilibrium between them.
The
events Flora shares with Nellie are shocking and heartbreaking, and yet they
are revealed in an almost emotionless manner, as if lives lost, denied, and
thrown away are hardly worth mentioning. Because, the secret shared is of
course one that some would say should never see the light of day.
This
is the sort of story you’ll read with relative ease only for its full impact to
hit you after you’ve closed the book. Only then do all the ‘what if’s’ and ‘if
only’s’ hit you with full force, leaving you feeling heartbroken for all
involved.
And
yet, no matter how much this is a story of love, it is also a tale of human
resilience and the power of our minds to keep us going. I think it will take me
a few more days before I figure out whether this was a depressing or ultimately
uplifting tale. Right now all I’m sure about is that it was memorable.
“I’ve
always wondered why the Americans consider happiness to be a right; of course
it isn’t. It’s a prize that comes, sometimes for no reason at all.”
Two Moons
Like
Counting
the Stars, Two Moons is a story about secrets, although maybe in a
different form. Whereas in the novella the main character had a shocking secret
to share, in this story it is Mimi who just before she dies at last learns the
secret that condemned her marriage.
I
don’t want to say too much about what that secret is or how it is to be
revealed, except to say that it will be achieved through the advocacy of a most
charming, Italian, angel. By the time the ‘secret’ was at last revealed on the
page I had long since guessed its nature — correctly. But then again, I think
maybe I was supposed to do so, the clues were there to be found, even if Mimi
either didn’t see them or refused to recognise them.
There
are so many betrayals in this book; between husband and wife, mother and
daughter, boyfriend and girlfriend. The characters face a constant battle
between right and wrong, their own needs versus those of others, obligations
versus desires. And yet, this is by no means a heavy book, nor is it
depressing. It is a gentle tale in which potentially shocking occurrences float
by, barely noteworthy and yet so very significant.
I
like the touch of magical realism in this story. Mimi’s visitations can’t be
written off as hallucinations, or signs of a crumbling mind, even if that’s
what they appear to be at first.
“Do you mean to say that you
are merely a figment of my imagination?”
“I never suggested any such
thing. Some voice in you called and I came.”
I
loved that the angel who may not have been an angel, left physical proof of his
presence behind. It gave the story yet another layer of intrigue and, at times,
a whimsical quality.
Also
like its companion story, Two Moons is the sort of story to
stick with you. It reveals all its various layers slowly; one after the other.
I have no doubt that this story too will continue to play on mind for days to
come.
Overall
I have to say that I’m delighted I picked this book for my reading group this
month. I had no idea what to expect before I started reading and was very
pleasantly surprised by what I found between the covers. And I’ve come to the
conclusion that I’ll have to read more of Johnston’s books; her well written,
easy to read, yet thought-provoking stories do strike a chord in me.
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