4.5 Stars
Love, dreams, sacrifice and family are the themes at the core of Courtney Sullivan’s latest novel,
” Saints for All Occasions,”
a story of two families from the small village of Miltown Malbay in Ireland, whose children leave their village for the hopes and dreams associated with a new life in America. One family sends their son ahead to set his new life in motion, so that when his bride-to-be and her sister arrive, everything will be easier for them. Beginning in the year 1957, this travels back and forth in time between 1957 and 2009. Time enough for the young women who left to no longer be the wide-eyed innocents they once were.
”Once, a circus had come to Miltown Malbay. Everyone gasped as an elephant ambled down the Flag Road. Nora thought then that it was the most extraordinary thing she would see in her life, but she had been mistaken.”
Nora is betrothed to Charlie, who has a plan to go ahead to Boston and get them situated, and then send for Nora. Nora, who would have preferred not to leave her home in Ireland, and isn’t quite sure she likes Charlie well enough to consider marrying him anyway, knows what is expected of her, and so she agrees to go, on the condition she can bring her younger sister, Theresa, telling Charlie before he set off for America: “I could never to go Boston without my sister.”
A year later, Charlie sends for twenty-one year-old Nora and her seventeen year-old sister, Theresa, his letters filled with wonder over the advances of life in America.
”I’ll never get used to how different it is. You turn a knob on the kitchen sink and hot water flows right out. There’s no carrying water from the pump, or boiling it in the kettle to clean the clothes. That’s just one of a million little miracles that everyone here takes for granted. You won’t believe it, Nora. I can’t wait for you to see.”
Where Nora is earnest and dependable, life is still a party waiting for her arrival to Theresa. Life has a way of interrupting plans, and one party too many, one handsome man to lead her a bit astray and whoopsie-daisy, a bit like an old rope skipping chant, first came lust, then came… um… … and then came someone with a baby carriage. A slight variation leaving out the bit about marriage.
A family secret that will be carried on for years begins, and fifty years later, Nora is the reigning matriarch of this family, with her four children grown, all raised and schooled in the Catholic Church. Theresa no longer goes by her given name, but has chosen a quiet, cloistered life in an abbey in Vermont.
Family stories like this can become too convoluted when too many generations are added in, we tend to get lost as the original family multiplies beyond our ability to follow, or, quite frankly, care. This felt just right to me, with the addition of the children grown and beginning to add to the family with significant others / spouses, children by birth or adoption – in other words, a family. There is some conflict, some heartache, but mostly there is a lot of love, with characters you will draw closer to, and love.
Having visited with friends who live in Miltown Malbay on my last trip to Ireland, it was nice to read about a spot of Ireland I’ve been to, which really added to the charm of this for me.