| EDNA O’BRIEN (1932- ) |
| Irish writer, famous for her rich and sensuous prose. O'Brien made her breakthrough with The Country Girls Trilogy (1960-64). Several of O'Brien's books, dealing with childhood and disappointments in sexual love, have been banned in Ireland. Her works have gained wide acclaim, particularly among American readers. Edna O'Brien was born in Twamgraney, County Clare. Her family was opposed to anything to do with literature and later she described her small village "enclosed, fervid and bigoted." When O'Brien was a student in Dublin and her mother found a book of Sean O'Casey in her suitcase she wanted to burn it. After finishing primary school O'Brien was educated at the Convent of Mercy in Loughrea (1941-46). In Dublin she worked in a pharmacy, and studied at the Pharmaceutical College at night. During this period she wrote small pieces for the Irish Press. In 1950 she was awarded a licence as pharmacist. Married in the summer of 1954, O'Brien moved with her husband, the Czech/Irish writer Ernest Gébler, and two sons to London. In Ireland she read such writers Tolstoy, Thackeray, F. Scott Fitzgerald. The first book O'Brien ever bought was Introducing James Joyce by T.S. Eliot. She has said that Joyce's Portrait of the Artist made her realize that she wanted literature for the rest of her life. While O'Brien was gaining fame as a writer, her husband struggled with his own works. Carlo Gébler, their son, writes in Father & I (2001), that he insisted she sign a payment from her publisher over to him - she did, and left him. Since her divorce in 1964, she has remained in England. Later she called her husband "an attractive father figure - a Professor Higgins." O'Brien published her first novel, The Country Girls, in 1960. The story is partly based on the author's own experiences being brought up in a convent. "The novel is autobiographical insofar I was born and bred in the west of Ireland, educated at a convent, and was full of romantic yearnings, coupled with a sense of outrage." (O'Brien in Writers at Work) The Country Girls continued in The Lonely Girl (1962) and Girls in Their Married Bliss (1964). The trilogy traced the lives of two Irish women, Kate and Baba, from their school days in the Irish countryside to their disillusioned adulthood and failed marriages in London. The friends have a strict Roman Catholic upbringing, which comes into conflict with their sexuality and their dependence on men. Kathy's relationship with a married man is fruitless. She starts an affair with Eugene, whom she considers a great lover but not much else. Her marriage with Eugene is unlucky, and they separate. Baba marries a man who offers her financial security. Because of the graphic sexual content of the story, the whole trilogy, and six of the author's subsequent works, were banned in Ireland. "While feminists have not been fond of her work because of her heroines' chasing after men, The Country Girls Trilogy is a powerful argument for feminism. To watch Kate and Baba and their various partners making war, not love, reminds us of ignorant armies that clash by night." (Anatole Broyard in The New York Times, May 11, 1986) In 1986, the three novels with an epilogue were published in one volume as The Country Girls Trilogy and Epilogue. In A Pagan Place (1971) O'Brien returned to the Ireland of her childhood. The novel told the story of a girl, who is seduced by a priest. Johnny I Hardly Knew You (1977) changes the roles of victim and oppressor. In the story a woman turns into an avenger, and murders her younger lover for the past betrayals of her other loves. In several of her works O'Brien has focused on the bitterness of women who have experienced failures in their relationship with men. Her women are often victims of their upbringing and her male characters violent or weak or treacherous, as in Time and Tide (1992), which tells of Nell Steadman, an Irish editor living in London, her disappointments in love, and marriage with a sadistic husband. O'Brien's novel Down by the River (1997) is based on a true-life legal and moral battle in 1992, when a 14-year-old girl, the purported victim of rape, sought an abortion in England. The protagonist of the novel is Mary, almost 14 years old and pregnant by her widowed father. She tries to drown herself, but is rescued by a neighbor, Betty, who takes her to England for a legal abortion. Before the operation can occur, Mary is pressured to return to Ireland. There she becomes the focal point in a nationwide fruitless debate about abortion, until nature solves her problem. O'Brien also fictionalized real-life events in the novel In the Forest (2002), the story of a mad, institutionalized boy, Michen, and his victims. "Skilful use of court records, psychiatrists' reports and Ms O'Brien's empathetic imagination, have resulted in a series of brief, juxtaposed, sometimes first-person chapters in which the dramatis personae propel the story forward. Particularly good is the way the two main characters - Michen and Eily, his victim - are balanced in a poetical, doomed dance, so that the narrative becomes their joint Greek tragedy."
|