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On Canaan's Side
 
 

On Canaan's Side [Kindle Edition]

Sebastian Barry
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)

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Review

'A work of great lyrical beauty, a big-hearted story of a woman at the end of her long and difficult life.' --Amy Raphael, The Times

'Imbued with sorrow, joy, tenderness and also moments of great humour ... a luminously beautiful story that well deserves its place on the Booker longlist, and beyond.' --Leyla Sanai, Independent on Sunday

'It's a story that will deepen your understanding of yourself and others. The quietening, closing chapters are amongst the most moving and beautiful you will read this year - or any other.' --Niall MacMonagle, Irish Times

'A lyrical evocation of trauma and exile, bearing a seemingly endless series of potent images.' --Alex Clark, Guardian

'Stunningly poetic ... On Canaan's Side can be celebrated for the beauty, wisdom and pleasure it provides.'
--Adam O'Riordan, Sunday Telegraph

Book Description

From the bestselling Costa Prize-winning author of The Secret Scripture another heartbreaking novel spanning a lifetime.

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 436 KB
  • Print Length: 269 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0571226531
  • Publisher: Faber and Faber Fiction (22 July 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0055MVHSC
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (27 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #2,709 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Sebastian Barry
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
54 of 56 people found the following review helpful
Haunting 3 Aug 2011
By Julia Flyte TOP 50 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
The story is narrated by Lilly Bere, an 89 year old Irish cook living on the East Coast of the US, who is mourning the sudden death of her grandson. It starts off as a jumble of memories, a raw stream of consciousness and I feared that this was going to be one of those impenetrable books that Booker Prize judges always seem to like so much and which leave me feeling cold. However the story soon starts to develop and pulls you in.

Lilly was born in Ireland and her early life is marked by the deaths of her mother and her brother. As a teenager she is forced to flee to the US ("Canaan's Side"), where she will live - somewhat fearfully - for the rest of her life. So it's the story of her life, but anchored in the present day loss of her beloved grandson. There are themes of war, loss, racial tensions and betrayal than recur, lending the story some genuine tension at times. However what really stands out is the achingly beautiful writing. Lilly's memories are like your own memories: sometimes events get jumbled together, sometimes events remain so acutely with us that you can still remember what the temperature was and the scent in the air and the music that was playing on the radio, even many years later. I liked the way that the writing doesn't always spell things out but allows the reader to make connections in their own mind. And the ending is perfect. This is a book to read slowly and savour.

If you enjoyed this, I'd also recommend Brooklyn, which has a similar feel.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Breathtaking Prose 4 Oct 2011
Format:Hardcover
To put it simply: Sebastian Barry writes so beautifully, so poetically, that when I read his books I find myself almost ashamed to admit that I'm also a writer - and a jealous one at that. His prose is so deeply humane and so well-crafted that almost reads like verse; verse that makes you want to cry; no, not from sorrow, but from joy, for having the privilege of reading it. I'm not implying that the subject matters with which the good author is preoccupied are pleasant, quite the opposite, they float in sadness, yet the way he narrates them do not bring much sorrow to the reader's heart. He seems, in a magical way, to grab the latter by the hand and lead him on to a journey through the wide paths of history, a history that touches everything and everyone in different ways; personal and impersonal at the same time.
This is the story of Lilly Berre, an eighty-nine year old woman, whose grandson Bill just died, and who now just sits and writes down her memoirs, reliving through them a long life full of sorrows and a few touches of joy. The narrator talks in a direct and almost oral way about love and war, about country and home, and about loss, old age and death. And she doesn't complain about anything, even just a little bit, although she has every right to do so, given the way the fates have treated her.
Her memories, despite her age, are crystal clear, as they are deeply engraved on her tortured soul. She remembers a father whom she loved too much, but whose choices have caused her endless troubles but also saved her life. She remembers her first big love, the man with whom she escaped from Ireland to America, just after the First World War, and whose face reminded her of a Van Gogh painting. She remembers her brother, like a hazy picture of times long gone and who died during that very same war. She remembers everything, and everything she writes, like a living testament, even though she says she hates writing. She needs to tell everything, to get it out of her breast, because: "We are not immune to memory."
Even though "the past is a crying child", as she writes somewhere in this seventeen day long monologue, she never cries: "I am cold because I cannot find my heart," she's quick to point out. However, she's not really cold, she's just hurt, as she's lived an eventful life, but nevertheless poor where results were concerned. She worked a lot, she fought hard for a better tomorrow, she spent years and years in fear and whatever she won she lost, whomever she loved she buried. And yet not a single word of complain ever escapes her lips. Lilly is a woman full of patience, one of those unique and rarely met souls that can only feel compassion for the others, and who know how to forgive. One could say that her way of thinking and living sounds kind of fatalistic, and one would be wrong. Her memories are sad, but not bitter, and her memories are her life. Writing them down is what keeps her alive; her resilience is her power.
"Tears have a better character cried alone," she thinks, and that's why she mourns her loss on her own and in the quiet. And her tears turn into pearls of wisdom and humanity. As Joe, one of the main characters says, we "live in a big box of fear." Lilly takes this fear and turns it into power; she takes that power and turns it into a story - the story we are now holding in our hands.
Absolutely brilliant.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By LittleMoon TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
"To remember sometimes is a great sorrow, but when the remembering has been done, there comes afterwards a very curious peacefulness. Because you have planted your flag on the summit of the sorrow. You have climbed it."

It's been a while since I have inhabited a novel to such an extent that returning to reality was almost unwelcome; it was at 3am this morning I finished "On Canaan's Side" to the chill of November air beyond my duvet.

Barry's novel demands a poetic review, such is the power of his writing, which is poetic in a way that only prose can be, vibrant with sweeping epic similes that meander over sentences, entrancing, ever so slightly imprecise. And it's the blurred edges of this narrative, its imagistic nature, which make tangible the memories of 89 year old Lilly Bere as she writes "terrified by grief" because she: "cannot depart without some effort to account for this despair."

And hers is a life that has courted a disproportionate amount of tragedy that would have floored all but the strongest of souls. Lilly though is "thankful for my life, infinitely" and her survival is due to a keen awareness of all the tiny moments of happiness that have been scattered through her life, and the lives of the people she's loved, and which she gathers around her as a shield against the relentless blows that fate has dealt her. "It's like a sort of TV, these memories" she tells us, and we know exactly what she means. We are there with her, on the roller-coaster just as the sun appears from behind a cloud "like a very thunderstorm of light" and she is "poised in the gentle under-singing of the wind ... almost to heaven", as surely as we are there when murder arrives with "vigorous unstoppable intent" pitching her down "to the core of the earth".

The empathy that Lilly inspires is where Sebastian Barry as a storyteller excels. He has created a woman whose desire to live burns brightly; whose indomitable will, generosity of spirit, optimism and understanding are irresistible. Lilly moves us by teaching us afresh what we already know, and what lies at the deepest heart of her story, the redeeming power of memory: "people that I have loved are allowed to live again ... the special happiness that is offered from the hand of sorrow."

Overall the novel feels very natural and unaffected, except for a final twist of coincidence, or fate, that seems contrived when weighed against the light touch with which the author has hitherto worked. I realise that some people dislike Barry's prose, but it would take a determinedly critical eye indeed to hunt out the artifice beneath its beauty. He is no Nabakov bullying a language into wild submission; instead, English comes alive under his touch as the sunshine might coax a bud into bloom. Few novelists can, with such apparent ease, create such a mesmerising and well-crafted tale for which the reader will give up their own world without even noticing: Sebastian Barry does here.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Brilliant writing and very moving
The best book I have read for some time.

Barry tells the story of Lilly Dunne from her childhood in Ireland to the final days of her old age in America with insight and... Read more
Published 25 days ago by mazzeratee
Promises more than it delivers
Maybe I was missing something here as I don't see any of the positives that other reviewers mention. I have never read a Sebastian Barry novel before, and doubt I shall again. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Ms. A. L. Young
Left me cold
On Canaan's Side is the story of Lilly Dunne, who escaped from troubled early 20th century Ireland to America, where no-one seems to be quite who they are. Read more
Published 1 month ago by nyonya
Sebastian Barry never disappoints me.
Another great novel from Sebastian Barry. His use of language is so impressive amd memorable. The main character Lilly is the narrator and right from the first sentence you know... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Kindler
Ponderous and meandering
Contemplating suicide following the death of her grandson, Lilly Bere looks back on the story of her life. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Deliabattie
A poignant look at grief and its ability to destroy
On Caanan's side by Sebastian Barry is an enveloping book, it draws you in almost immediately with terrific poetic prose describing the 89 year old protangonist, Lilly Bere's grief... Read more
Published 3 months ago by S. Enston
Slightly depressing reflection on a woman's life
On Canaan's Side, which was longlisted but not shortlisted for the 2011 Man Booker Prize, tells the story of Lily Bere, an elderly Irish American and her "First Day Without Bill"... Read more
Published 3 months ago by R. A. Davison
Brilliant prose, but ...
There is no denying the brilliance of Barry's prose, even if some of it has the air of pastiche, or over-wrought parody. Read more
Published 4 months ago by E. Clarke
On Canaan's side
I loved this book and have passed it on to my son as he likes this writer also. I have read some of his other books and intend to red more.
Published 5 months ago by Mrs. M. Lamb
On Canaan's Side
I was very satisfied with the speed and efficiency with which my book was ordered then paid for and delivered.
Published 7 months ago by John Murphy
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Popular Highlights

 (What's this?)
&quote;
To remember sometimes is a great sorrow, but when the remembering has been done, there comes afterwards a very curious peacefulness. Because you have planted your flag on the summit of the sorrow. You have climbed it. &quote;
Highlighted by 37 Kindle users
&quote;
Tears have a better character cried alone. Pity can sometimes be more wolf than dog. &quote;
Highlighted by 23 Kindle users
&quote;
How strange, how strange. We may be immune to typhoid, tetanus, chickenpox, diphtheria, but never memory. There is no inoculation against that. &quote;
Highlighted by 21 Kindle users

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