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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
ELEGANT PROSE - KEEN UNDERSTANDING, 30 Oct 2000
By A Customer
Following on the heels of his memorable Death In Summer (1998), the incomparable Irish storyteller, William Trevor, brings us a collection of 12 poignant tales that illuminate the human condition. Acknowledged by many to be the master of his oeuvre, Trevor commands our attention with dignity and subtlety. Amazingly adept at shifting perspectives from male to female in varying locations and scenes, the author's championship form is again evident in The Hill Bachelors. His initial offering, "Three People" is an incisive rendering of the toll of fabrication. A trio share a secret too dark for utterance which binds them together yet holds love at bay. A lonely minister's life is compassionately observed in "Of The Cloth." The Rev. Grattan Fitzmaurice oversees three small churches, "...one of them now unattended, each of them remote, as his rectory was, as his life was." He lives alone in the rectory where "Emptily, all sound came twice because an echo added a pretence of more activity than there was, as if in mercy offering companionship." Bea, a nine-year-old with long dark hair, in "Good News" hopes that a movie part will heal the rupture in her family, while Clione in "A Friend in the Trade" is a middle-aged woman with whom "Beauty has not finished." She knows what is unspoken and feels only pity for an unrequited love. Trevor's spare prose shimmers in the summary paragraph of "The Virgin's Gift," as he describes a son's return to his now frail, elderly parents: "No choirs sang, there was no sudden splendour, only limbs racked by toil in a smoky hovel, a hand that blindly searched the air. Yet angels surely held the cobweb of this mercy, the gift of a son given again." Another story takes place on the eve of a wedding when a game forces a young couple to confront the differences in one another. With "Against The Odds," Trevor displays his gift for knowing the female heart as an older woman rues her past while fearing she has jeopardized a chance for happiness. Both eloquent and elegant, Trevor's work is meat compared to the broth of some of today's fiction. He continues to astound as he explores the complexities of human relationships with sympathetic candor. The Hill Bachelors is yet another triumph for the most accomplished storyteller of our day.
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