Have one to sell? Sell yours here
What the Curlew Said: "Nostos" Continued
 
See larger image
 
Tell the Publisher!
I’d like to read this book on Kindle

Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.

What the Curlew Said: "Nostos" Continued [Hardcover]

John Moriarty


Available from these sellers.


Amazon.co.uk Trade-In Store
Did you know you can trade in your old books for an Amazon.co.uk Gift Card to spend on the things you want? Visit the Amazon.co.uk Trade-In Store for more details.

Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought


Product details


More About the Author

John Moriarty
Discover books, learn about writers, and more.

Visit Amazon's John Moriarty Page

Product Description

Review

"'Every household in Ireland should have a copy of this magical book. I am indulging in no idle hyperbole when I say that this autobiography is one of the most remarkable autobiographies I have ever read in my entire life.' - PAUL DURCAN 'In Nostos Moriarty has surpassed all his previous achievements. Because it is in the recording of his life, that his passionate imagination finally makes sense, and here he has recorded his life expansively and clearly and movingly. It is written in exquisite Irish - English, it's a unique voice, and it sings through in every page of a beautifully made book.' - MICHAEL HARDING, Sunday Tribune 'Here is a larger-than-life book from a larger-than-life life. The autobiography becomes a treasure trove of quotations, of poems and stories, of myths and legends, all tending towards an understanding of where we come from, who we are, and where we ought to be going. The patient reader of this book will warm to a generous spirit, to a mind and body devoted to healing the ills of the present by pointing to the past. The dull and dulling events of the life of a man intent on understanding are brought alive in this huge achievement in such a way that will move you with a belief that humanity has a meaning and relevance that can yet beautify our egotistical and polluted world.' - JOHN F. DEANE, Irish Independent"

Product Description

This extra-ordinary work of autobiography concludes the story of John Moriarty's life in Connemara during the 1980s and the return to his native Kerry. He relates the particularities of his time at Toombeloa, Roundstone and environs, where he worked restoring gardens and building his own house. He describes his adopted family and the children of the household, with sorties to Dublin for Christmas; his neighbourhood and community; the writer Tim Robinson; returned pine martens, the fish and flora of a historic landscape; a lecture tour in Canada, organized by his former students; his engagement with the immensities of the natural and spiritual worlds. He calls to account the literatures and legacies of European thought made manifest in the western extremities of Ireland as they bear witness to his own inner and outer journey, now documented in this compelling and writerly masterwork.

Tags Customers Associate with This Product

 (What's this?)
Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
 

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Sell a Digital Version of This Book in the Kindle Store

If you are a publisher or author and hold the digital rights to a book, you can sell a digital version of it in our Kindle Store. Learn more

What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?


Customer Reviews

There are no customer reviews yet on Amazon U.K.
5 star:    (0)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
Share your experience with this product with others
Create your own review
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Fourteenth way of looking at a blackbird, 12 Aug 2008
By John L Murphy "Fionnchú" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: What the Curlew Said: "Nostos" Continued (Hardcover)
After reading four or five-- they do run together-- of this late Kerry shaman's mythopoeic effusions, this last volume, written not long before his death from cancer, does not add much to his voluminous and often bewilderingly esoteric texts. He's surely blessed in having a patient editor at Dublin's fine Liliput Press, Anthony Farrell, who sponsored his works for two decades. That's why I was a bit surprised to find out in "Curlew" that another of his final books, "Night Journey to Buddh Gaia," had been by Farrell rejected as more of the same-old same-old. This criticism appears to hold true for whatever was published as "Night," and like his other (yes, he does write a lot) recent work, the somewhat more focused by default "Invoking Ireland," Moriarty keeps spiralling back to the constant themes that since his debut "Dreamland" have occupied his mind.

As he puts it early on in this closely printed 375 pp. tome: he makes sure "that I do not relapse in to European common sense." (43) Readers may concur in this judgement, if not for the same reasons he gives. I admire much of his thought, but his manner of repetition, endlessly and idiosyncratically, may appeal more to followers of Blake, Yeats, the Upanishads, or Native American storytelling modes. He hates Aristotelian logic that insists a thing cannot be both A and not-A simultaneously. He urges "people who live and who think extramurally," looking beyond the barriers towards whats' over Hadrian's Wall, what lurks in Celtic, Asian, and other indigenous remnants of hearing "what the curlew said." Reacting against our Western need to add it all up, he urges us to remember the magic that led us conceive the mathematics. Rather than pinning down perception, he advocates apperception, staying in the moment. Surprisingly, Robert Pirsig's "Zen & the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" remains unmentioned, as does Teilhard de Chardin and the work done by physicists with the anthropic cosmological principle. I'd have appreciated such links to congenial minds. On the other hand, Moriarty possesses the deep-knowledge to penetrate the Irish language, Sanskrit and Tibetan texts, and the shamanistic aura as one who edges near the abyss in his quest over forty years.

Answering his book's title: "I think he didn't say anything at all but he said it in such a way that we have now no need, nor had we ever, to import Zen Buddhism into Ireland. It was already here before our people came here." (74) Amidst so much philosophizing, he can break into welcome clarity. He conjures up a wonderful description of his last house, near Torc Mountain in his native Kerry, where he hoped to establish a "Sli na Firinne," a "way of truth," as a hedge school for mystics like himself. As only a farm boy could, he perceives the oneness in the peace surrounding him and the violence of foxes plundering a wren's nest to devour its "still bald chicks, they themselves, every time their mother returns with a mouth full of death, seeming to be little more than luridly shrieking voracities for insects and grubs." (297) He adds: "To survive at all on such a day I'd have to forgo being a self: where normally I would say 'I see', now in self-abeyance I would say 'seeing is'." He breaks down the "subjective-objective divide" as "a disposable piece of mental machinery, the mechanism of our alienation, turning us into spectators." He concludes: "The fourteenth way of looking at a blackbird or at Torc Mountain is to remove the one who looks from the looking."

I do wish in this sequel to his "Nostos" autobiography that he'd have told us more about his time in Connemara near Roundstone. Surely his conversations with cartographer-chronicler of that area and the Aran Islands, Tim Robinson, or his talks with the late local priest, the psychologist John O'Donahue, might have enlivened many pages. Moriarty's reticence, given his effusiveness, surprises me. An author told me that in his own meeting with Moriarty, it happened to come up by chance that he had known Ted Hughes; in "Curlew," while he cites a poem by him, there's no mention of any personal connection. Similarly, he's in Ireland here but appears too rarely grounded in the land; his affectionate exchanges with a few loved ones do soften the impact of what can be a relentlessly serious recounting of his mental and spiritual struggles, and I only wish he'd have shared more of such. He needs to humanize himself for his readers who never had the chance to hear him speak.

Anyhow, this is what we have to remember him by. He came a long way from a Kerry farm and the Irish Catholic childhood once so common to his native land. He observes, contrasting himself at twelve with a neighbor girl now: "At Mary Margaret's age we were vastly knowledgeable, and knowing, so much so that if the entire adult population suddenly died out one night, we would be out there driving cows to milk them, we could take over." (226) He laments the diminishing dream of a spiritually renewed Ireland that the rebels and revivalists failed to establish as the nation which rapidly forgets its heritage; it must have been painful for him to live there while so much changed, even as he too left behind his Christian conventions in search of a Jesus better suited to the empty tomb, akin to the Buddha contemplated on his empty throne, as a more congenial, apophatic presence for us.

This retreat from the quotidian into the less travelled roads within cost him. He does not reveal much, but you sense he teetered near the edge for a while before recovering in rural Ireland in the 1980s and 90s. There's little consideration of modern Irish in the remote coastal places he lived, where its ghosts can still be sensed in speech if not its everyday presence, but he does provide a sadly appropriate insight. He compares the English "they are buried" with the Irish "Ta sid curtha"-- "They are planted." New growth follows in a new season. Likewise, "we have laid them to rest" locks us down, while "Ta sid imithe ar Shli na Firinne" gives us the marvellous hope that the dead "have set out on the Trail of Truth," or as he renders it better: "They have set out on the adventure of their immortality." (63)

Only much later do we find, as he learns, that he is dying of cancer as he writes this book. He accepts it with admirable grace, noting that three decades earlier he had a lot of bad karma still to sweat out. However, he readies himself with the words of Al Hallaj: "Between me and Thee there is an 'I am' that torments me. Ah! through Thy 'I am' take away my 'I am' from between us both." (335) He differentiates physical from mystical death. "Physical death doesn't remove the obstructing 'I am'. Only God does that for us." He awaits his "final transition" with remarkable courage and admirable dignity. He anticipates desire, longing, and yearning to lose himself in Oneness. "In comparison with all of this, physical death is but an episode, many times incurred, in a continuing adventure."

This is a book that like any other one from Moriarty annoyed me but challenged me. He produces many of the same tales from Melville or Black Elk or Cu/ Roi or the Grand Canyon that I've read before in his works. He admits, here, his own difficulty for readers, but he insists, it seems, to follow his own stubborn path to Truth. His style may not please those wanting more rational, linear, or Aristotleian structures. He's circling and wandering through his inner journeys, and on paper they prove more a Borgesian labyrinth than a classical paradigm. Still, his shortcomings for those of us expecting more academically mimetic production parallel his refusal to go along with the philosophical career he once attempted. He proves his rebellion against the norms by his own trailblazing, for the few daring to follow. His works continue to perplex me, but perhaps they will endure in years to come when more theoretically trapped, less imaginative, scholars turn dated and dull.

One of the last sentences in this rambling, disorienting, eccentric, frustrating, and intermittently rewarding and profound collection of thoughts and stories sticks with me. "I go for broke, leaving all that I naturally and supernaturally am, leaving all I in any way am, behind me in trackless dark infinity. Over to you, God." (376) His sequel to "Nostos" reveals his readiness for a true "homecoming."
 Go to Amazon U.S. to see the review  4.0 out of 5 stars 
Was this review helpful?   Let us know

Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
£1,965.00!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 0 21 Dec 2011
See all discussions...  
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
   
Related forums


Listmania!

Create a Listmania! list

Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject






i.e., each product must be in subject 1 AND subject 2 AND ...

Feedback