8/5/23: Reflecting on this book after seeing the second in the Quirke series featuring Gabriel Byrne: As I say below, I don't like sensationalist serial killer stories, but the 90-minute episode pares things down and tells the story of this book more subtly and powerfully than I recall in reading it. My take on it is that if the first book, Christine Falls, honors women and children, and reveals how little the world of Catholic Ireland in the fifties protected/advocated for them, The Silver Swan extends that point to show women still unprotected by the Church and society, and also by men such as The Silver Swan, who is less cartoonish in the filmed version. As a father I saw how vulnerable and near to disaster Quirke's daughter Phoebe is in this story. Powerful scenes between Phoebe and Quirke, and between Sarah and Quirke.
Original review, 7/13/22: So I have until now loved three straight books by John Banville, including his mysteries written under the pseudonym Benjamin Black. I really loved the first of Black’s Quirke series, Christine Falls, a layered, complex story set in Dublin in the fifties, featuring all sorts of deeply flawed characters with a backdrop of shady, deeply sad dealings of the Catholic Church with respect to “wayward women.” Banville has said that “crime fiction is a good way of addressing the question of evil;” both Christine Falls and Silver Swan (also titled elsewhere The Double Life of Laura Swan, which I think is more appropriate) seem to mainly focus on the treatment of women during this period, by the Church, by anyone in power, especially by men, of course.
Oh, Quirke, our main character pathologist, has his own issues with women. He was once in love with Sarah, but she married Malachy; Quirke married Sarah’s sister Delia, who died in childbirth. Always a heavy drinker, he begins, in his grief, the long steady project of drinking himself to death, with failed relationships with women (mainly one-night stands) along the way. As a pathologist he feels more comfortable with the dead than the living, until something sparks in him with the death of Christine Falls, in childbirth. Why is he interested in this case? He can’t exactly answer that, until the end when he says that it maybe is his chance to do something right in his life after all these years.
Spoiler alert: The Silver Swan takes place a couple years after the events of Christine Falls, also involving the death of a woman, presumed to be a suicide. Quirke has discovered that his niece Phoebe is actually his daughter, and after he finally tells her, at nineteen, she is enraged and becomes estranged from him. And then the secret (unrequited, never acted on) love of his life, Sarah, is also suddenly dead. And in this book, he suddenly wakes up one day and stops drinking. He does interact with lots of strong women in this story--Phoebe’s grandmother Rose is a great character--but the central women in the story, Deirdre Hunt (who as a beautician changes her name--and identity, to the more dramatic Laura Swan [think of the character Laura Hunt from the 1944 noir Otto Preminger film, or even Hitchcock’s Rebecca]) and Phoebe make "mistakes" (they are manipulated)/passivity with obviously horrifically bad men.
When Hunt is found drowned by accident or suicide, Quirke's "old itch to cut into the quick of things, to delve into the dark of what was hidden" prompts him to investigate, especially after his old university acquaintance, Billy Hunt, approaches him to request there be no post-mortem autopsy--too upsetting to think of his wife cut up--and Quirke for no really good reason, agrees, falsifying the death certificate! Why?! Then he finds a needle mark on Deirdre’s arm, so "he knew he would dive, headfirst, into the depths. Something in him yearned for the darkness there."
But then we don’t see Quirke for most of the book, as author Black tries out a couple mystery novel strategies; 1) he goes back in time to see how it is Deirdre, the beautician, married to Billy, gets herself dead (yeah, no one buys those suicide or accidental death explanations), telling the story from her perspective, and 2) revealing how she (and many women) get entangled with a silver-haired handsome con man named Lesley White (yeah, he's the "Silver Swan" of the title, but he's not really the main character). I don’t mind too much the shift in perspectives (though I missed the interesting Quirke for half the book), but I really disliked White as a character. He’s into s/m, he’s a Svengali, an obvious liar, a heroin addict, a kind of cult leader, just a ball of cliches.
Yes, women do fall for these kinds of guys and are taken in, trafficked by or otherwise just hoodwinked by these guys, but I just found him uninteresting as a character. And I hate it when crime authors turn, for “thriller”-effects, to salacious details associated with serial killers of women. Other good writers, too, such as Lawrence Block (in his otherwise amazing Matt Scudder detective series) succumb to this ploy, and it detracts from the kind of serious character study that we saw in Christine Falls. There’s another weirdo Svengali guy White is associated with, too, Dr. Kreutz, a charlatan that teaches “spiritual healing” classes to women, drugs them and takes--this is the fifties--"dirty pictures” of them (in part to blackmail them). Again, I know nothing about this character, really. It’s just slimy sensationalism to include him as a character. He seems like some thirties noir creep, too unreal. Maybe a tribute to some noir writing Black has in mind. But I say: Keep your focus on Quirke and Phoebe, Black!
It is finally Detective Hackett (that blunt instrument) who solves the case, always suspecting Quirke has been lying about various aspects of the case. Hackett’s an interesting character, a good foil and potential partner for Quirke, and it’s interesting to see him take a more central role. I won’t say exactly what happens with Phoebe, but it stretched credulity that she got mixed up in this mess.
The writing of the very ending was beautiful, reminding me that this is one of the best writers in the world, raised my rating of the book a bit, but it was still not enough for me to say I really loved the book. I was disappointed in this entry, but will certainly read on.