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5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful Debut, Jan 19 2012
This review is from: The Last Will of Moira Leahy: A Novel (Hardcover)
The Last Will of Moira Leahy is a captivating, haunting debut novel by Therese Walsh. This is a heart wrenching, soul searching story of grief and loss, as the surviving sister, Maeve, tries to reconcile herself to a life without her identical twin, Moira. Normally at this point I would say what genre this novel would fit into, however; The Last Will of Moira Leahy does not fit into any one specific category. Walsh wrote this novel much like knitting a multi-coloured sweater. It is not blue nor red nor purple but a pleasing blend of suspense, woman's fiction, mysticism, coming-of-age story, romance, a journey and a sprinkling of the paranormal, while exploring the family dynamics of grief, as well as, the actions and reactions of those left behind. Beautifully written, The Last Will of Moira Leahy will reach in and squeeze your heart. What makes a novel exceptional is not necessarily the story itself, but the manner and method used to construct the story. The Last Will of Moira Leahy is written in alternating first person current time and third person back story from 1995 to 2000; two separate story lines that build on each other in momentum and suspense. The pace of the story adds greatly to the suspense as all the right notes are pitch perfect. Walsh manages with both her lovely writing style and the manner in which she has constructed her novel, to demonstrate how family dynamics both pulls and pushes its members closer and further apart much like magnets as they can simultaneously attract and repulse. Maeve's story is from the first person view point in current time and is gripping in its description of isolation and loneliness, emphasizing oneness and being alone. The reader is confronted with a pervading sadness as we meet this character who is not only separated her friends and family, but, from her true self as well. The Maeve we meet in the beginning of the novel does not stray from routine and has virtually erased herself to the point that she has bleached her once dramatic red hair. Once a musical protégée, Maeve has suppressed this talent and has been living an isolated life in academia as a professor of languages. She is haunted by sounds of piano music and dreams of little girls with red hair; Maeve fears for her own sanity. She quietly keeps these fears to herself. Maeve attends an auction to distract herself from her tragic memories of November and becomes obsessed with purchasing a Javanese dagger, keris. The keris is very similar to a knife that belonged to her grandfather lost years ago by herself and Moira playing pirate out in the bay in Castine, Maine. Reminded of happier times with Moira, Maeve forcefully bids and successfully purchases the keris. A note from the previous owner is later found with an invitation to Rome with the incentive to find out more about the meaning behind this specially carved blade. Completely out of character, Maeve embarks on a on a journey to Rome in search of the origins of the keris, only to be led on a journey of self discovery and healing. The back story of Maeve and Moira's childhood is told from Moira's point of view, third person set at a distance, emphasizing the distance in time and place. As children Maeve and Moira are extremely close to the point that they feel each others emotions and pains, and even have their own language. Their mother wants the girls to have separate identities and emphasizes the difference between the girls. Adding stress to family life, the girl's mother takes on the care of their grandfather after he suffers a stroke. Maeve becomes the talented fun loving twin and Moira the dependable home body, her mother's good girl. As the girls enter adolescence, Moira, living in her sister's shadow, begins to pull away from Maeve in a desperate search for a separate identity and self worth. Moira's need to define herself and exert her own will in opposition to the expectations of both her mother and sister comes to a head when both girls become attracted to the same boy. Moira craves adventure, and, willfully, embarks on a secret romance. In doing so she must sever her most intimate relationship with her sister, Maeve. The threads of the story weave together as Maeve, now in Rome, learns of the magical properties of the keris that mysteriously links to the past she has tried to forget. Notes are nailed to Maeve's door with only the Javanese word eling, meaning remember. Maeve is joined by Noel, a long time friend and not quite yet a boyfriend. Afraid of becoming too close again to another, Maeve must confront her fears of intimacy as Maeve and Noel together search Rome for the previous, and now, elusive owner of the keris. More mysterious notes direct Maeve to different locations within the city where she finds painful memories of her tragic past along with the beautiful sites of Rome. The keris exerting its own will, leads Maeve back to remember and confront her past. Only in her memories of her sister, Moira, can Maeve find the forgiveness she needs to allow herself to let go of this past, and, the will to really live her life. Even though the reader is well aware that Maeve lost her twin tragically at 16 from the very first page of the story, this is a novel of exquisite suspense as Walsh delivers a well paced story leading the reader irresistibly to the surprising conclusion. The book was impossible to put down. Walsh has written a wonderful story of grief and forgiveness, remembering and letting go. We would all be so lucky to have a magic knife or keris fly into our lives to cut through the illusions and delusions in which we surround ourselves, and help us clearly see our selves and those people who are most important to us, and; in doing so, help us find our own truth. Therese Walsh you are very talented and must write more books. Highly Recommend.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Beautiful Story, Oct 15 2009
By Sean Brannagh - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Last Will of Moira Leahy: A Novel (Hardcover)
If you're looking for mindless popcorn, this is probably not for you. If you're looking for high brow literature, this probably not for you either. But, if you're looking for a highly readable and extraordinarily well crafted story, this is definitely for you. The plot line has been adequately addressed in other posts - so I won't recap. The story is told in two parallel narratives - a present day story told from Maeve Leahy's point-of-view and an out-of-time story involving Maeve and her twin sister Moira Leahy as adolescents. These lines are so skillfully interwoven, it will send shivers through you. This book should be savored like a really high quality piece of dark chocolate. Let it sit there on your tongue a while, soften-up, begin to melt. Anticipation is part of what makes the "Last Will" experience so wonderful and meaningful. Secrets of the story are revealed in brilliant measures, journeys of the characters are completed in graceful arcs, the prose is gorgeous and the story crescendoes in a series of scenes - one in particular - that will leave you, at minimum, misty - more likely with tears streaming. The main character, Maeve, emerges emotionally whole at the end, but this story is so emotionally engaging and satisfying that this reader is feeling a bit 'healed' as well. A very visceral experience and the mark of great writing. This one has lingered with me and is still turning over in my mind. The richness of the characters, the story structure, the language. I wish I had someone to talk about it with. This would be a really good choice for book clubs.
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Touching, and just..just., Sep 27 2009
By Kathleen Wagner - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Last Will of Moira Leahy: A Novel (Hardcover)
Pre-release customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program
Enough. Just light enough. Just dark enough. Just perfectly balanced and just enough. Maeve and Moira were twin girls who lived with their family on the Penobscot. They lived with loving parents, an adventuring grandfather and good friends and neighbors. Like so many twins they shared a special closeness, and even a language between just the two of them. For years they had all that they needed in just themselves in the security of their family. Time passes. Things change. A mothers well meaning choices came back to haunt them all. One day, a boy came into their lives and things changed forever. The story of how Maeve lived after the changes, and what happened to this loving family.. is entrancing, magical at times and filled with sorrow and loneliness. Just for a while.. and then as they do, things changed. They changed because Maeve found a strength in her she didn't know she had. She was prodded by her father to step out, step forward and to live. A wise man, he was. He set both of his daughters free. Read this book. Highly recommended.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Magical!, Oct 25 2009
By E. Ramer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Last Will of Moira Leahy: A Novel (Hardcover)
Twenty-five-year-old Maeve Leahy is haunted by the tragic accident of her twin sister, Moira, nine years ago. Since then, Maeve, the vibrant twin and saxophone prodigy, has shut down her emotions and shut out the music, leading a lonely and sterile life as a professor of languages in upstate New York. But she can't resist the call of a keris, a Javanese dagger, that she buys at auction. The keris leads her to Rome, and to danger and romance and a confrontation with the past and the present. The chapters alternate between the present in Maeve's voice and the past in Moira's voice. Walsh is an artist with words, using them exquisitely, painting pictures with a few strokes that evoke emotions. Yet the pace is quick, the scenes enchanting, compelling me to read on. This is Walsh's debut book, and I'm thrilled to think she'll have many other books for me to read in the future. Soon, I hope!
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