The country girls trilogy : and epilogue

by Edna O'Brien

Hardcover, 1960

DDC/MDS

823/.914

Publication

London : Jonathan Cape, 1987.

Original publication date

1987

Description

"The country girls are Caithleen "Kate" Brady and Bridget "Baba" Brennan, and their story begins in the repressive atmosphere of a small village in the west of Ireland in the years following World War II. Kate is a romantic, looking for love; Baba is a survivor. Setting out to conquer the bright lights of Dublin, they are rewarded with comical miscommunications, furtive liaisons, bad faith, bad luck, bad sex, and compromise; marrying for the wrong reasons, betraying for the wrong reasons, fighting in their separate ways against the overwhelming wave of expectations forced upon "girls" of every era."--Back cover.

Status

Available

Call number

823/.914

Tags

Collection

User reviews

LibraryThing member efoltz
I enjoyed the first book or section best. The trilogy and epilogue follows two Irish girls from adolescence to menopause. Most of the book is about the girls' relationship and their relationships with men. At times, their families make an appearance to pass judgement. They tend to pick men who are
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wrong for them to get involved with. The story is based when telephones are first being put into houses. Towards the end, I was tired of reading it and ready to be done.
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LibraryThing member NarelleJ
A good old fashion read.
LibraryThing member m.belljackson
Do not read the Introduction unless you want the entire plot laid out before you read it.

The first book of the trilogy opens with gentle suspense as the ordinary daily life of a girl, her mother, and their hired man
revolves around speculation and fears about the fate of the missing, violent drunken
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father.

The story flows seamlessly between conversations and evocative descriptions of Irish country landscapes.
Then it moves into endless details of the interactions of the two country girls,
Caithleen passive, Baba a mean bully, and their respective mothers, passive and mean.

Men are uniformly drunk, deplorable, predatory, violent, and otherwise questionable as fathers, husbands,
friends, and priests. The Gentleman is the sole exception and eventually he peters out.

Girls get themselves expelled from their convent school and move to Dublin where Baba becomes slightly subdued since she is no longer feared by her friend.
Plot drags with clothing obsessions and boredom.

The Lonely Girl picks up two years later with some powerful landscape descriptions brightening an otherwise repetitive crawl toward seduction.
Eugene Gaillard's pursuit of innocent Kate is a long and improbable stretch where she is deserted by yet another married man.

Story moves to pathos with: "It is the only possession I have which I regard as mine, that cork with the round silver top."
It continues reciting the boring lives of two ordinary young women beset by stupidity and not transformed by any passion for creating,
for caring for others, for compassion, or for love. Empty and repetitive.

Eventually, in Girls in Their Married Bliss, Kate's needy, jealous, and fearful insecurity drives her husband away.
Eugene, who surprisingly returned to claim her after his desertion, is the only character I liked.
Despite his obsessive tendencies, he was the only intelligent one with a real sense of humor, irony, and truth.

While this may be a realistic depiction of the lives of the girls, it becomes predictably unredeemable and depressing:
"If nothing else, she'd get drunk."

Though the tame sexual episodes were shocking in their time, it is the pervasive Catholic negativity which amazed me,
expected from the priests, but unquestioned by the girls' families and the various people of the town.
It was also unusual to see no mention of father/daughter incest and Catholic complicity.
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LibraryThing member amerynth
I enjoyed two out of the three books in Edna O'Brien's "The Country Girls Trilogy and Epilogue." Probably unsurprisingly, I enjoyed the first two books, (which are on the 1,001 Books to Read before you Die list and are much stronger installments) much more than the final book.

The story mainly
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follows Caithleen, who has the misfortune to grow up poor with a deceased mother and drunkard father in rural Ireland. Her relationship with her frenemy Baba is all pervasive in her life and changes its course. Over the course of the series, the girls grow up and get kicked out of school, move to Dublin where they date, dance and drink with a variety of men, and later move on to marry just the wrong guys.

I disliked the switch in narration in the third book to Baba's point of view -- it really didn't provide any enlightenment about her character -- it actually made her more one-dimensional to me. I liked the first two books enough that I found the series enjoyable overall though.
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LibraryThing member eglinton
Freshness, innocence, and an engaging, unfussy style. O’Brien creates direct and likeable characters for her young girls coming of age in the hidebound, repressive, tight-lipped Ireland of the ‘50s. Hard to credit now, 60 plus years on, with today’s Ireland bedded in as the opportunity-rich
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society we see in Normal People, but the honesty, moral neutrality and probably the very playfulness of this treatment caused a storm of condemnations and controversy in its day. Hard to be sure quite how sanctimonious and repressed real people actually were back then; perhaps O’Brien’s work is some evidence of spirited lives being lived beyond official disapproval.
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Physical description

532 p.; 23 cm

ISBN

0224024213 / 9780224024211
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