The Dublin Coincidences



If writers used co-incidences in their plots as often as they actually occur in life, few readers would be convinced. In April a book that I ghosted, Secret Child by Gordon Lewis, is being published by HarperCollins. It is based in Dublinand is the inspiring story of a boy who was born and brought up in a secretive home for unmarried Catholic mothers in the 1950s.
By sheer co-incidence, this Saturday I am being interviewed at the Mountains to Sea Book Festival in Dublin– a city I have never been to before. What are the chances?
On top of that I am being interviewed by Sue Leonard, a journalist I talked to for the first time a few months ago when she interviewed me for the Irish Examiner upon the publication of my memoir “Confessions of a Ghostwriter”.
It seems like the whole thing was just meant to be.
Secret Child is a touching story. Gordon had no idea what his mother had gone through before she arrived at Regina Coeli and he had no idea that he was a secret from her family and from everyone else in the outside world. No one outside the hostel knew that he even existed.
In fact he knew nothing of the outside world until he was old enough to start getting out of the hostel buildings and up to mischief in the streets of Dublin. That was when his mother realised that she was going to have to do something to save her boy from the sort of bleak future that faced so many illegitimate children in Irelandat that time – and save him from the dangers of his own reckless high spirits.
So, at the age of eight, Gordon was introduced to a much older man called Bill and told that he and his mother were going to be leaving the hostel, which had been the only home he had ever known, and travel to England to live with Bill. Over the following years, as the three of them struggled to survive, Gordon came to realise that there was more to his mother’s and Bill’s story than he could ever have imagined.
They had been lovers who had been separated by the religious divides of the time and by the ignorance of their families. Gordon knew Bill was not his real father, but no one ever talked about that, just as no one ever talked about their past life in Ireland. It was like it had never existed. Gordon’s whole life was full of secrets and puzzles and only when he returns to Ireland fifty years after leaving it, is he finally able to make sense of the whole story and understand the full horror of the hardships his mother suffered and the depth of the love story between her and Bill.
It will be wonderful to get to spend a weekend in the city that I have been writing about and experiencing so vividly through the eyes of another.


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Published on March 18, 2015 09:13
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