74 of 81 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Folkloric Newfoundland, September 17, 2009
This review is from: Galore (Hardcover)
Michael Crummey was born & raised in Newfoundland, lives there still, and has set all of his meticulously researched novels & collections of short stories thus far in this beautiful, windswept, and harshly-demanding Canadian province.
is set in the outport villages of Paradise Deep and The Gut, joined by the Tolt Road over the headland between them, in an undefined period that covers most of the nineteenth century and the first few years of the twentieth. The novel chronicles the lives of two rival families (the Sellers and the Devines) for six generations, and I often referred to the genealogy chart at the front of the book, especially during my first reading.
Inspired by the works of Gabriel García Márquez, Crummey has combined the starkly difficult conditions of pioneer outporters with a touch of magical realism. According to Wikipedia, magical realism is "an artistic genre in which magical elements or illogical scenarios appear in an otherwise realistic or even `normal' setting." This is Crummey's first use of the method in his novels.
Part 1 of Galore more or less moves around the life of Mary Tryphena Devine who is nine years old the winter day that a whale beaches itself in the bay. From the whale's belly emerges, half-dead, the man who becomes known as Judah, the Big White, whose presence will affect the lives of all in the port, and none more so than Mary Tryphena's.
As Mary Tryphena matures, marries, has sons (one illegitimate), and then grandchildren, the story goes back and forth between the history of Mary T.'s grandmother (Devine's Widow) and her parents, and the interconnection with King-Me Sellers and his grandson Absalom. The boy Absalom has fallen in love Mary T., who unbeknownst to him, is his first cousin. For this, he is banished to England for half a decade. While he is gone, Mary Tryphena is married to someone else and is lost to him.
Nearly four decades pass in the intermission between Parts 1 and 2, and we pick up the story with Mary Tryphena an old woman with the community role that her grandmother, Devine's Widow, had. We learn of the events of the intervening years through the eyes of two grown brothers we last knew as boys who ferry the young newly-arrived Dr. Harold Newman to patients by boat, by dog-sled and on foot.
As they tell the stories that the reader already knows, it becomes clear that a large number of the people in the community do not believe the stories that have been passed on. It's here that magical realism that has been interwoven into Part 1 is brought into question.
Did Judah really come out of the belly of the whale? Did he indeed bring the squid, and then fish galore? Did Callum really see the mermaid that the Woundy brothers nearly went overboard for? Was Jabez Trim's bible really found in the gullet of a cod? How do we explain Mr. Gallagher?
I'm not a fan of magical realism, but I think that part of the reason that the author could use the technique so readily and successfully in the first half of the saga is the vacuum of any other explanation of other-worldly phenomena. The itinerant priest who served the marrying, baptizing, and burying needs of the Catholic population was an agent of superstition. (Not that the population was any better served in later times with the Protestant Reverend Dodge and the Catholic priest of the season. Both applied scriptures harshly and the Catholic church especially meddled in the political affairs of the people, threatening ex-communication for anyone who joined the Fishermen's Protective Union in the early years of the twentieth century.)
Perhaps I just relate more easily to the starkness of early Newfoundland life than to the heat of Central America, but I found that, although I could not stomach Márquez, I loved the effect in Crummey's Galore.
One of the effects that I felt played a huge part in this novel is the indeterminate passage of time. Crummey might pick up the next paragraph, page or chapter with the following week, but just as often with thirty years in the past or ten years hence, with no explanation or placement. At first, I found this disconcerting but as the story developed, I found it to be one of its greatest strengths. Dates were not important, particularly in Part 1.
Time passed from one generation to the next, affected strongly by the last, and life went on unchanged. World events had little, if any, impact on the people's lives. There was no change in circumstances, no accumulation of material goods, no inheritances. There was simply the unending drudgery, cold, hunger, fishing, the cycles of plenty and want, the love, and the hate that remained the same for generation after generation. Hopeless circumstances and a futile existence.
Galore is not a happy book, but an amazingly powerful read. I highly recommend that you do just that.
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33 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
All encompassing, fascinating, and full of the rich detail of a community, August 12, 2009
This review is from: Galore (Hardcover)
I had occasion to read an Advance Reading Copy of Michael Crummey's third novel, Galore. It's the first Michael Crummey I've read, and I now know I need to read anything else by him I can get my hands on.
A multi-generational tale of community, Galore is set in a small fishing village in Newfoundland - exactly when and exactly where are not revealed. The story begins with the death of a whale, and a shocking discovery inside its belly.
It tracks generations of two families, the Sellers and the Devines, and their rivalries, grudging inter-dependence, secret romances and superstitions.
The village is entirely dependent on the mercy of the ocean - to provide their food, to return their sailors home safe, to not wash away their homes. Year after year, babies are born, people die, people marry, hopes are raised and dashed, and the ocean is there for it all, along with the mystery the dead whale brought.
I enjoyed this book tremendously. Galore is a treat to read, by turns dark and slippery, funny and quirky, heartbreaking and tragic, and the people feel real enough to touch. Their stories can't be put down. I recommend it highly.
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47 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A bleak and haunting tale of tangled threads, March 29, 2011
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Life in Paradise Deep is harsh and unforgiving. The small fishing community ekes out a meager existence often teetering on the brink of starvation and freezing to death during the bitter Newfoundland winters. "Galore" follows the lives of the motley inhabitants of the village over a century or so - largely focusing on their relations one to another and the evolution of the village itself.
Michael Crummey's storytelling was certainly unique - whether for good or ill. The story lacks both a principle protagonist and a central conflict and abandons any precept of proceeding chronologically within the book's first three paragraphs. The narrative is like a tangle of thread. Picking a random thread, the author slowly pulls it free, patiently revealing it to the reader. At some point the thread snags another. He turns his attention there, pulling with equal care and deliberation. Before each thread is free, another is snagged. Thus he bounces back and forth in time revealing some event or chain of events in the life of one character or another. Undoubtedly an oversimplification, but perhaps a more fitting analogy would be jumping from branch to branch on a family tree.
The result is a series of related but thinly drawn anecdotes. The characters were deeply human, but so quickly were they used and discarded, little attachment was formed. The book overflows with treachery and tragedy, but everything was given such short shrift the impact was severely limited. The mechanics were also unique in that the dialogue was denoted by hyphens or paragraph breaks instead of quotation marks.
The supernatural or mythical played a very minor role. The focus instead was a pragmatic look at 19th century Newfoundland life - the rigors of daily existence (which are vividly rendered), seasoned with religious and cultural strife, greed, politics, and, predominantly, family relations (largely dysfunctional).
There is a family tree reference at the beginning of the novel which can prove helpful (keeping the characters straight became a challenge). One wonders, however, if such a reference would have been necessary had the characters been more distinct and the story less convoluted.
While certainly intriguing and moderately affecting in its way, the novel seemed to lack an overall purpose. It was just too random to rate higher than three stars.
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