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Dr Maureen O'Connor contributing to this year鈥檚 Dublin One City One Book programme
Dr O鈥機onnor will be delivering a talk, 鈥淕irl Talk: Controversy and The Country Girls鈥 at the Ballyroan Library in Rathfarnham on 11 April, and participating in a panel discussion on the topic of 鈥淲riting Women, Society, and Sex in Ireland鈥 at the National Library on 13 April.
Dublin: One City, One Book is an award-winning Dublin City Council initiative, led by Dublin City Public Libraries, which encourages everyone to read a book connected with the capital city during the month of April every year. The 2019 book choice is Edna O鈥橞rien鈥檚 The Country Girl Trilogy.
The Country Girls Trilogy
When The Country Girls, Edna O鈥橞rien鈥檚 first novel, appeared in 1960, it predated and anticipated the feminist revolution. It stood out and stood alone, upturning every category. There was little to compare with it.
The Country Girls grew over time to what we now know as The Country Girls Trilogy, encompassing the title volume, a second novel Girl with Green Eyes,published in 1962, and Girls in Their Married Bliss, published in 1964. It is given to few to write their most important works early on. Quite simply, The Country Girls is a twentieth-century literary masterpiece which anticipates and puts into effect a feminist revolution all of its own.
It tells the story of two young girls from Country Clare, Cait Brady and Baba Brennan, and tracks them from childhood through the vicissitudes of adolescence, marriage, emigration to Dublin and then to London and the terrible reckonings of adult life. Cait, the timid romanticist, who unfailingly falls for the wrong kind of man and suffers accordingly, is contrasted with Baba who is more hard-nosed, cynical, and pragmatic.
The Country Girls Trilogy is outstanding because of its stylistic variation and the uncanny accuracy of its vision: each of the novels is tonally quite different but each achieves the same level of precision and insight into the social and emotional conditions of lives in 1950s rural Ireland and in London in the 1960s.
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