Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Love amid loss

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Sebastian Barry displays his masterly craftsmans­hip in the sequel to the award-winning Days Without End.

find a voice for her as Hilary Mantel is to enter the mind of Thomas Cromwell. In both cases, there is only one intelligen­t question: Is it well done? In both cases it is supremely well done, and that’s enough. A Thousand Moons is, like so much of the greatest fiction, a crime novel. There is private crime – a rape, a beating, a murder – and there is public or political crime, the aftermath of the terrible Civil War in Tennessee, where the defeated Confederat­es seek first revenge, which takes the form of lynchings, murders and arson, and then the re-establishm­ent of their political power, which leads to a terrorist becoming a judge, and justice first denied, then horribly perverted.

How do you survive in such a diseased climate? Winona has dark memories from her ruined childhood, memories of her mother and a way of life in harmony with nature. These memories, an accuser might say, are sentimenta­lised, but they are memories which Winona was justified in retaining, and it is the richness of her memories which make for the alertness of her response to the physical world, to the shimmering beauty of the landscape and to its birds and wild animals.

Then Winona is strengthen­ed by the love that surrounds her: the love of McNulty and Cole for each other and for her, the loving support of their employer, the love of the two emancipate­d slaves Rosalee and her brother Tennyson, and finally the love of Peg, a girl whom she first fights and then befriends.

So in the end she may conclude that, while “the world was strange and lost”

and that there was no place that was not “perilous,” the reality of love is the “truth self-evident to behold”. In this realisatio­n, the crime novel becomes an affirmativ­e one.

Barry writes with the freshness and beauty of an early summer morning when the dew sparkles and the air shimmers with the promise of a glorious day. He is also a masterly craftsman, modulating the pace of his narrative, alternatin­g vivid scenes of action with tranquil moments in which time seems to stand still. It is common for novelists to do their best work when they are in early middle-life, between say 35 and 50, before energy begins to fail and many years at the desk have dulled their response to experience, and so they come often to repeat themselves or at best offer new variations on familiar themes. Not Barry; his writing is better than ever. Days Without End and A Thousand Moons are equally marvellous; together, one of the finest achievemen­ts in contempora­ry fiction.

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