The Little Red Chairs
Edna O’Brien
Back Bay Books/ Little Brown and Company
2015
Ms. Hen came to read this book because she had read another
book by Edna O’Brien, and she looked at her pile of to-read books, and she
discovered that they were all by men. She went on a book-buying spree of women
authors and happened to come upon this novel. She was intrigued by the story
about a woman who falls for a perpetrator of genocide.
This is a novel about a small village in Ireland where a
stranger comes to town. It has been said there are only two plots: a stranger comes
to town, and someone goes on a journey. This novel consists of both those
plots. Vlad arrives in Cloonoila, and announces that he is a sex therapist and
a healer. The people are intrigued, especially Fidelma, who is married and
childless, and wants a baby desperately.
Fidelma and Vlad come together and he helps her. But he is
not who he claims to be. He is a war criminal from Bosnia in charge of
murdering thousands of innocent people. Ms. Hen knew this when she was reading
the book that the man was vicious, but she did not believe it, because he appears so kind in the beginning, since it seems as if he wants to help Fidelma.
Edna O’Brien does not hold back on the barbarity in this
novel. Ms. Hen was shocked by the gruesomeness of it, which reminded her of the
gritty brutality of Toni Morrison’s work. Vlad is a brute, and those people
have enemies. What those enemies did to Fidelma will burn in Ms. Hen’s mind for
a long time.
After that, Fidelma went on a journey, thus the other plot.
She travels to London and leaves her husband and the village behind. She tries
to get work in a boutique, but she does not succeed. She arrives at a shelter,
and makes new friends. She does not tell anyone what happened to her. She is
ashamed of her love affair with Vlad, because he was arrested and is going to
be on trial.
Ms. Hen loved this novel because it was not what she
expected it to be. The village is a peaceful place, and the people live their
own lives, and get by, but their lives are shattered, and the story turns in
ways that Ms. Hen did not expect. Fidelma meets many characters along her
journey, and survives. She is strong the way a woman who has had to put up with
hell can be.
There are a handful of hens in this novel, as there are in many
novels that take place in rural areas. Vlad rents a room from a woman named Fifi, “They settled on a price of one hundred Euros per week, and as fortune had it, he could now
look after Bibi and her six hens while she kept her promise to go over to
Mickey in Leenane.” Ms. Hen is unsettled by a murderer watching hens, but she
knows he has done worse things than hurt animals.
There’s something about this novel that draws Ms. Hen in and
keeps her wondering what will happen. Ms. Hen loved living in this world,
though the characters suffered. She realized that getting through and surviving is what makes life beautiful and worthwhile, for decent people to
live and to learn not to look back and stew too much in what came before.
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