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Spirits of the Irish: Bron Sibree Chats to Sebastian Barry About His Latest Book The Temporary Gentleman

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By Bron Sibree for the Sunday Times

The Temporary GentlemanThe Temporary Gentleman
Sebastian Barry (Faber & Faber)
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Sebastian Barry is famed for chronicling the story of 20th century Ireland in his novels – powerful, poetically charged novels in which he first set out to dramatise the foibles, fortunes and misfortunes of his own family, yet in so doing has created a kind of secret history of his homeland, of “men and women defeated and discarded by their times”, as one prominent Irish critic put it. The Temporary Gentleman is another part of that ambitious ongoing literary project, which Barry himself describes as “a small effort to write people back into the book of life”.

In The Temporary Gentleman he tells the story of his maternal grandfather, a man who’d seeded his grandson’s love of storytelling with tales of his travel and war exploits, but who’d squandered his own good fortune through an addiction to gambling and alcohol. Barry first wrote about his grandfather in a 1981 novella based on stories his mother, the actress Joan O’Hara, had told him. “You think there’s certain people you can’t offend, but I certainly did offend him,” he recalls. Not that it prevented Barry writing a play about him after his death, Our Lady of Sligo. “But I always felt I was very hard on him when I wrote about him before. I suppose you could make an argument that this book is hard on him. It is much darker than the others. But then I was on different ground”.

Indeed, the protagonist of The Temporary Gentleman, Jack McNulty, is the older brother of the title character in Barry’s 1998 novel, The Whereabouts Of Eneas McNulty and brother-in-law to Roseanne McNulty of his 2008 Costa Award-winning novel, The Secret Scripture. Unlike either of them, he is not victim of circumstance but architect of his own downfall. “He is,” says Barry, “the victorious king who manages to reverse his chess game so that he’s the snookered king”.

Holed up in Ghana in 1957, where he was once stationed during the war, McNulty is battling booze, guilt and despair while writing a memoir of his long dead, long suffering wife Mai and their turbulent, alcohol soaked marriage. While the novel soars on prose of heart-stopping melodic beauty, it is also a heartbreakingly bleak tale of ruin, with dysfunctional love at its centre. “We like to think of love as a redeeming quality but it’s also sometimes the chain that binds one misguided person to another,” says Barry. “At the same time, is not alcohol, which can be delightful, also a most pernicious and destructive drug? So there is that too, for them. And if you could itemise the history of alcohol in Irish families and in the history of Ireland, you’d wonder why it isn’t three times more illegal that heroin.”

Barry’s fabled eloquence moves to a higher plane when he speaks of Ireland’s woes, past and present. He is a passionate believer that nothing should be left unsaid. “That was an instinct I had starting out in the ’70s and ’80s. When you state these secrets, when you do finally say them, the Irish have this gift of rising up toward the truth. We can say lots of bad things about our own people, we’re allowed. But this is a very, very good thing about Ireland. They rise up and meet you halfway. And that,” he adds, “is probably why I’ve kept going”.

Follow Bron on Twitter @BronSibree

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