I read this a long time ago, shortly after it was first published, but as I started re-reading, it all started to slowly begin to feel familiar as aspects began to come back. Echoes by Maeve Binchy is a wonderful character driven piece of historical fiction that takes us back to the Ireland of the 1950s and 1960s. She paints a picture of small Irish town life of the period, evoked vibrantly by her rich descriptions and details, with a host of characters, many that are eminently unlikeable, with the gossip, class rigidity, prejudices, judgementalism, gender limitations faced by girls and women, the central place, strictness and importance of the Irish Roman Catholic Church within the community, capturing the social norms and attitudes, including the lack of understanding and dismissal of issues such as post-natal depression.
This is the story of working class Claire O'Brien, a shopkeeper's daughter, bright and ambitious, determined to escape her circumstances, helped by teacher, Angela O'Hara, gaining scholarships that take her to Dublin. Then there is David Power, the doctor's son, a David and Claire who break the expectations that they face, and Gerry Doyle, from a similar background as Claire, obsessed by her. Binchy tells the emotive story of lives that are intertwined through the years, the challenges, of love, class, hardships, infidelities, betrayal and tragedy, where the echoes of the past can be hard to shake off. This is a compelling and immersive Irish novel, of a bygone era, of its time and place, aspects of which makes me grateful that the world has moved on, yet retains echoes of a simpler, more straightforward time compared to the complexities and pressures of our contemporary world. This turned out to be an enjoyable re-read! Many thanks to Random House Cornerstone for a copy of the book.