Niall Lenihan is thrilled to have obtained a prestigious scholarship to study at the salubrious Trinity College in Dublin. A young man from the suburbs, Niall is looking forward to tasting the delights of the big city, at last able to leave his unhurried life with his parents and his innocent childhood behind. It's not that he doesn't love his mother and father; it's just that as a young gay man, the cosmopolitanism of Ireland's largest city holds such promise, exhilaration, and fun.
It doesn't take long for Niall to settle into the sacred halls of Trinity College, sampling his newfound surrounds, the lights of the big city now on his doorstep. The Dublin streets are thriving, with a gay nightlife that is teaming with erotic possibilities. Niall is immediately seduced by the potential for easy sex, "the flashing lights, and smell of aftershave, the smell of male sweat and Smirnoff Ice" and spends his nights cruising for guys and drinking in the city's various pubs, hotels, and nightclubs.
He also manages to make a few new friends along the way, especially the bubbly Fionnuala with her warm sense of companionship, and whilst he reconnects with his sturdy best friend Patrick, even ending up sharing an apartment with him, Niall mostly connects on a deeper level with Chris, a good looking Northerner, who eventually charms Niall with his clipped friendly accent, and earthy kindly ways.
However, it is to the enigmatic Sarah and John that Niall is most attracted. After saving him from a near fatal gay bashing, Niall is steadily drawn to John; it's part sexual attraction and part mystification at this cloistered, sinister world that he shares with Sarah. Both John and Sarah seek guidance from the pages of literature letting the signs and symbols, the sentences from books determine their actions in life.
Grudgingly, they admit him to their private sessions, a type of candle lit séance, where sections of books are repeated in a mantra again and again. At first, the excitable Niall treats this new pursuit as type of frivolous game, failing to take seriously this strange world of "sortes," and "synchronicities." However, soon odd coincidences begin to plague him: A strange man who knows his name sings songs at his window, and words of the song keep turning up everywhere he looks.
As Niall becomes ever more addicted and besotted, seduced by the possibility of the fullness and newness of things he doesn't know, he begins to realize that he has a strange energy that is connecting in some way with an energy of another world, a world he cannot readily see, the world in all writing and art, and perhaps also the world of the dead. The synchronicities open a channel, the domains of experience opening up a fissure where one "world" can flow into another, two mutually exclusive universes held in the balance.
Whilst Niall fanatically pulls the endless threads of meaning from tiny fragments of prose, text messages and voice mail messages from the worried Patrick and the concerned Fionnuala are left unanswered. As fits of melancholy become more deliberating, a frequent a sense of doom fills Niall, and soon he is spinning fiction - first lying to Chris, and then to his psychiatrist when he fails his first year of study. He wants to shake the sinister hold that Sarah and John have over him, but the thought of continually connecting to another more spiritual world is just too enticing for him to pass up.
Author Barry Mcrea has spun a wholly original tale of self-discovery, as he recounts with an intellectual grandeur and psychological adroitness, his young protagonist's efforts to move on, and hopefully leave the ghosts of the past behind him. Niall tries to build up a complete picture of the world that he feels is missing, but in his efforts to do so, he is in danger of alienating those who are the closest to him.
Written with layers of metaphor and meaning, and a narrative structure that is complex and multi-layered, we not only witness Niall as he transforms into a man of newly acquired confidence and worldliness, but we also witness his efforts to almost reinvent his masculinity. The First Verse is far from a coming out story - although Neill is gay, he is surprisingly comfortable with his sexuality – instead, the novel is more a trenchant study of one young man's efforts to "make an old world slowly bleed into a new one."
Littered with hip, vibrant, and, youthful characters, right on the cusp of achievement, The First Verse is a book lover's delight, a darkly ironic tribute to the world of literature, the insular world of academia, and also to the written word. Before he realizes it, Niall is plunged into a shadowy world, forced to live in a profoundly isolated nucleus, an utter disconnection from the normal outside world. Mike Leonard January 06.