Walter Macken...wow, I'm going to hunt down every book you ever wrote. Stumbled across a review for the "The Bogman" in an Irish magazine and was curious about it. It was published in 1952 and tells the story of Cahal Kinsella an Irish bastard reared in a public institution and released to the care of his Grandfather just as he is on the verge of manhood. He enters the village Caherlo and here is where the story is spun. Depressing? Well, maybe...sad, yeah, a little but in the end..ehhhh, you be the judge reader!
I could not put this book down, and would have inhaled it in a single sitting if I didn't need to attend to life. The story very nearly jumps out of the pages. Each character is so brilliantly developed you will find thinking about them feels similar to thinking about people you have actually met. What makes the whole thing stick in my brain though is the undertones of a different story being told. I haven't quite worked it out, but it is something to be weighed by everyone who has ever made a mistake in their life and/or treated another harshly or coldly those trespassed against you. The young vibrant Jennie sums it up when she says to Cahal one day down by the bog...
"I'll never forgive me mother for that day of threshin'. That day, I wanted to go out and help you, despite. They locked the door on me, and she hit me, and she'd have given me more...If I had gone out that day I would have been another help, and that thing would never have happened..that thing was a terrible thing Cahal, I cried all night that night, so I did. And then they say it was her own fault, and a penance from God, and a punishment for sin, and I don't think so at all. I think it was their fault and that when they die God will be up there waiting for them, and He'll say, 'Well, well, if it isn't the villagers of Caherlo. And now, hmmm, let us have a little chat about that day'...."
Macken's style is so dang smooth and yet colloquial. The story can be a bit like the relationship of Ireland and GB, how even the former "small" man can be brutal when given the power and means to do so. It is the seduction of tradition and being on the strong side at the expense of harming something vulnerable because of its ability to manifest the shortcomings of your own self or its even its singular will to daring to dream. There's more to be said, but the straight simple message is...I will think of this book the next time I find myself yammering on about my "neighbor."
Cahal loves song and cleverly composed several about his fellow villagers, you will find title "Bogman" a clever title to a song in the form of a novel about a life, in full Irish style...sad, poignant, beautiful, a bit sentimental, and brutal.