Megan Nolan recently wrote about ‘Ordinary Human Failings’; in Lazy City, Connolly skilfully captures ‘ordinary human sadness’ in a very similar vein to Michael Magee’s ‘Close to Home’ but from a woman’s perspective.
Do I have your attention? Good, Irish fiction is on top form right now, and this slow burning beauty is no exception.
Erin, in something of a knee-jerk reaction, flees London student life after the tragic death of her best friend. She returns home to Belfast, and if she expected a warm welcome, she’d be wrong, instead entering into more animosity with her volatile, emotionally dysregulated mother.
Erin soon moves in with Anne-Marie, acting as a house cleaner and live-in childminder for her smallies. This isn't the life she wants, but it suits her for now. Her mornings spent running by the Lagan, and her nights spent drinking with her hometown friend Declan, an aspiring artist who works in her local pub.
Looking for solace maybe, she quickly develops an obsessive interest in Matt, a lonely yet suspiciously cheerful American, who’s in Belfast to teach at Queen’s University and write his novel. She and Matt begin seeing each other, and, against her better judgement, she also resumes a quasi-relationship with Mikey.
As Erin moves through the quotidian mundanity, she struggles to confront the depths of her grief. The unholy trinity of sex, drugs and alcohol numb and blur the sharp edges of her pain, but unable or unwilling to confide in others, she returns to visiting churches, spaces where she can feel calm and where she begins to find some level of catharsis while sitting alone among the religious imagery of Catholicism.
Lazy City is the story of Erin, how she considers past relationships, her faith, and Northern Ireland’s recent history. However, her often underdeveloped introspection and lack of depth given to past trauma means the novel never quite reaches its emotional potential. Saying that I tore through it in one sitting, you can't help but root for our rather uprooted protagonist. Lazy City is a solid debut. 4⭐
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for the chance to read this advance review copy in return for an, as always, honest review.