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The Story of Lucy Gault
 
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The Story of Lucy Gault [Large Print] (Hardcover)

de William Trevor (Author)
3.2étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (13 évaluations de client)

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The first calamitous act of this heart-wrenching story occurs on the evening of "June the twenty-first, nineteen twenty-one," as the opening sentence precisely dates it (and ominously so in its doubling of the number). This marker begins the story of Lucy Gault in the time of the first worst twentieth-century "Troubles" between the English and the Irish. One night Lucy's father fires a warning shot at some local boys who've come to convince him that he and his Anglo-Irish family should quit the big Irish house Gaults have occupied for generations, or die in it. The dogs were poisoned on an earlier visit, and this time the boys carry kerosene. Gault's warning shot hits one of the boys in the shoulder. Despite subsequent efforts to defuse the situation with apology and bribery, WWI veteran Captain Everard Gault and his wife, Heloise, decide that they, like their gentry neighbours, had better get out of Ireland.
Although Gaults built the big house, Lahardane, and have occupied it for generations, in the calamitous course of Irish history they remain interlopers, intolerable conqueror-settlers to Republican patriots. Masterfully, Trevor traces the historical situation in the first few pages, from Evarard's point of view (Trevor's easing in and out of different points of view is a treat in itself), sketching his journey from bemusement at the locals' resentment, to bafflement, to fear. When the remorseful Captain Gault strategically goes to the injured boy's home with an apology that seeks assurance of security, and sees "barefoot children coming and going in the kitchen, one of them occasionally turning the wheel of the bellows, sparks rising from the turf." The perfectly observed description shows the radical contrast in living conditions, implies the cyclical give-and-take of incessant historical time (the "wheel", the present participles), and the rebuke figuratively smouldering in the land itself, sparking violence. Pointedly, without ironic self-consciousness, Gault designates the boys at whom he shot as "trespassers", as literally they are, but in thinking so he inadvertently opens a snake-pit of postcolonial complexities about who owns what and when. Regardless, and perhaps too cutely, Trevor's narrator insists on downplaying a political reading of his story: "Chance, not wrath, had this summer ordered the fate of the Gaults." That direct statement is simultaneously true and not wholly true; or consideration of the causal event need not compel an either/or choice but allow for both—the confluence of political anger and bad luck.
Lucy, the Gault's eight-year-old daughter, is resolutely attached to the only home she has known. And eight is the perfect age for a child to execute a misfiring ruse that seems at first but a prank of protest. Lucy's deception believably leads her parents and their servants to conclude that she is dead, drowned in the sea whose presence is as tangible as another character in the novel. Lucy is left behind by her fleeing parents. She is found near death by servant Henry. He and his wife, Bridget, lovingly raise her at Lahardane, which has been entrusted to their care. There, Lucy keeps the lifelong vigil that is the heart of her story, a story that, with all else mentioned above, includes a love story as sweet in its inception as it is frustrating in its failure to follow the natural course to consummation in marriage. In waiting and waiting somewhat too exactingly for parental absolution, Lucy can be seen as a Penelope figure, one whose rigorously vigilant heart is besieged by true love, and one who eventually takes up petit-point embroidery. Trevor doesn't have Lucy un-stitch her work each night, but his petit point is made no less fancifully for all that: this is also a small modern story of equally epic relevancy, though not a novel aspiring to be another Ulysses.
William Trevor does everything here with an enchantingly light hand and never treats his subject sentimentally. His narrator doesn't suggest that the innocent, culpable, pathetic, brave, persevering, graceful, and literate Lucy can also be read as an allegorical figure of Ireland itself (famous for being figured in abandoned females), yet she also invites such a reading. Trevor's is also a light hand in this sense: in a deceptively accumulating manner, he irradiates his fictional world with the kind of paradoxical illumination that can be achieved only by great writers. The recent stories and novels of this septuagenarian master often end so (think of the assaulted and abandoned Felicia of Felicia's Journey ending on a park bench, as good as encased in a saintly nimbus). And of course the name Lucy, like Lucifer, derives from the Latin lux, meaning light, as Lucy Gault's story is the narrative of light become darkness become dappled light in a tale whose dominant tone is mysterious twilight.
For a review, this one has told too much of the story of Lucy Gault, bare bones though I've tried to keep it (and I've not even mentioned the way in which the shot boy weaves through the whole story). As the novel's self-reflexive title suggests, this is perhaps the most literary, not to say metafictional work (I can imagine Trevor cringing at the expression) in Trevor's body of brilliant stories and novels. The townsfolk of the rural Cork setting are themselves forever telling and re-telling the story of Lucy Gault, trying to tame haphazard reality by making this particular bit of it behave as a distinguishing, if domesticated and overly conventionalized, local story. Trevor is thereby showing how events become stories, how stories become local legend, become cultural myth. He does various kinds of Irish speech to the syllable (Cork dialect, Youghal precisely, country, town, Anglo-Irish), yet, against stereotype, there's scarcely a character who communicates at more than a phrase or two. (For example, to say that the servant Henry is taciturn would be tantamount to remarking that Finnegans Wake is a tricky read.)
But not only the locals are hungry for confirming story; just about everyone connected to the story of Lucy Gault is involved with narrative as a means of mediating exacting reality or of seeking consolation for life's losses. This 'narramania' is true, of course, of the austere author, who well may conceive of himself as a literary artist standing apart from the narrative and paring his nails but whose superior craftsmanship inheres in every sentence (keeping readers ever aware that they are reading a story and, in this way, forcing sentimental readers, such as the present reviewer, to keep their aesthetic distance). It is true of the deaf and dumb fisherman who teaches the eponymous protagonist to communicate with her hands. And again self-reflexively, Lucy Gault's self-exiled parents spend their peripatetic lives seeking comfort in art that tells a story of sainted suffering (Italian painting and sculpture mostly). Distant communication and mis-communication of potentially life-altering letters never reach their destinations or are not read correctly. Writing and story-telling seem to change nothing. Nothing but the reader's consciousness.
Lucy Gault herself is a compulsive reader and re-reader of novels, nineteenth-century novels. In the few references to Austin and Hardy, we as readers are tipped intertextually to the kind of novel Trevor has wrought here: a story of the "calamitous" (Trevor's preferred word) consequences that follow a couple of acts that tragically express the combined workings of Irish history, chance, and the classical conception of a fate that is indistinguishable from character; a story of extended and extensive frustration that comes to rest in a tranquility that is both human and superhuman; a mystery; even a version of hagiography, as the two nuns who visit Lucy in her old age believe there's something saintly about her life-long suffering and tranquility. It's worth noting that the main miracle in the life of St. Lucy, the martyred patron saint of sight and virgins, is her turning into an immovable object when the Roman soldiers come to haul her off, just as Trevor's Lucy remains fixed firmly in her faith at Lahardane.
The best novels still give us fully realized characters who choose to act significantly, whose actions seem inevitable given their humours, with characters and action arising from a setting that further make time and place inextricably bound up in the movement of the whole story from beginning to end. If that kind of story told in an illuminating prose fits your definition of a great novel, then you will agree with this reviewer that William Trevor is one of our greatest living writers. In The Story of Lucy Gault he has told the world yet another magnificent story.
Gerald Lynch (Books in Canada) This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.


From Publishers Weekly

Trevor (Death in Summer) is one of the finest prose stylists writing today; his delicately shaded novels and stories often have a Chekhovian sense of loss and longing. This novel, with its elegiac tale of a quiet, sad life lived in the shadow of a wrecked childhood, could well have been penned by the Russian master. Lucy is nine years old when her father, a wealthy Irish army captain married to an Englishwoman, shoots at and wounds one of a trio of locals trying to set his Irish country house, Lahardane, afire in the 1920s. Captain Gault and his wife, Heloise, decide they must leave for England and safety, but Lucy, who has known no other home but Lahardane, flees into the woods on the eve of their departure and cannot be found. Eventually convinced she has drowned at a nearby beach, her parents leave for a life of wandering and grieving exile in Europe, utterly out of touch with their old life. Lucy, however, is discovered, starved but alive, days later by two faithful retainers, who with the aid of a family lawyer keep the house open as Lucy grows into womanhood. [...] Trevor's deeply poetic sense of the Irish character and countryside, his magical evocation of the passing of time, have never been more eloquent. This is a book to be quietly cherished. (Sept. 30) Forecast: Admirers of the author will need no urging to seek this out, and widespread and positive review attention should help win new ones.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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L'avis des consommateurs

13 évaluations
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3.2étoiles sur 5 (13 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5 LIVES OF QUIET DESPERATION..., Fév 3 2009
Par Lawyeraau (Balmoral Castle) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Story Of Lucy Gault (Paperback)
This is a beautifully written book, rife with emotion and feeling. It is a book that will keep the reader riveted to its pages until the very last one is turned, so absorbing is the story. It is, as the title of the book says, the story of one Lucy Gault. Her story begins in Ireland in 1921, in the shadow of the Partition of Ireland. Feelings against the English and Protestants were running high, and many of the manorial estates were being targeted for destruction by the local Catholic peasantry in that time of unrest.

The Gault family lived in a lovely ancestral home, Lahardane, tucked away in the remote Irish countryside. Captain Everard Gault, Lucy's father, though Irish, was Protestant and had served in the English Army. He was married to Heloise, an English woman. These facts had evidently not gone unnoticed by the local yokels. When the Gaults find that their home has been targeted for destruction and the threat of arson is all too real, the Gaults reluctantly decide to leave their beloved home in the care of their two faithful family retainers and relocate to England for safety's sake. This is a decision that leaves their nine year old daughter, Lucy, heartbroken.

Lucy is loath to leave her beloved home with its resplendent land, rolling acres of lush greenery, as well as its lovely beach, and a beloved dog for which her feelings run deep. Lahardane is, indeed, a child's paradise. Just before they are due to leave, a distraught Lucy, desperate to change the way things are going, decides to run away in hopes of having her parents see things her way. Instead, what occurs is a tragedy of epic proportions, one that would have far reaching ramifications, changing the lives of many. It would certainly impact profoundly upon Lucy.

This is truly a gloriously written, thematically complex book in which the author examines the way that love and calamity can shape destiny. Its complexity is belied by its simple, yet rich and lyrical, prose. The author lovingly tenders the delicately nuanced words that express the strong undercurrent of emotion that ripples beneath the surface of this haunting novel, drawing the reader into its heartbreaking story of love, forgiveness, and redemption. The fatalism of its characters aptly mirrors the historical fatalism of the Irish. This is a literary gem that the reader will, undoubtedly, read in one sitting, as I did, loath to break the careful cadence of the words that tell so compelling a story. Bravo!
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4.0étoiles sur 5 "Love is beyond all reason when it is starved", Janv. 20 2004
Par S. Calhoun "rhymeswithorange" (Chicago, IL United States) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Story Of Lucy Gault (Paperback)
In an attempt to ward off intruders from his estate Captain Gault fired a warning shot in the dark that would forever change his life and those around him. As Protestants the Gaults felt their well-being was continually threatened as Partition undermined the political and social foundations of Ireland in 1921. As a result Captain Gault decided to return to the safety of England with his wife and young daughter, Lucy. But Lucy isn't happy at all with the prospect of leaving the only home she has known and she is too young to fully comprehend the reasons. On the day of their anticipated departure Lucy is believed to have drowned when some of her clothing articles was discovered near the shore. It is widely acknowledged that the sea has a tendency to swallow both unaware ships and swimmers. In the midst of their grieving and loss Captain Gault and his wife continue their plans of emigrating, but as they begin their journey they decide that England is not far enough away from the source of their pain. Without communicating with a single person from their previous life they venture on to Switzerland and Italy. Meanwhile back in Ireland it is realized that Lucy has not drowned and is indeed alive but unfortunately there is no way to pass on the news to her parents because no one knows how to reach them. Decades pass while the separation between Lucy and her parents created deep psychological consequences that continue to affect their livelihood.

THE STORY OF LUCY GAULT is a somber and dark tale of individuals searching for redemption and forgiveness for the innocent acts they have committed in their past. William Trevor created a poignant mix of characters that are forever marked with the choices that they have made. This book is admittedly small, but it contains a shocking and realistic story of how one girl's mischief has resulted in such devastating results for all. Individuals living in the surrounding villages all were accustomed with the tale of Lucy Gault, and her life was forever introduced to newcomers. It is a tale that is sure to live for generations in that section of Ireland. While reading this slim book I was sincerely touched by Trevor's portrayal of the longing for forgiveness and the haunting of regret. He excelled in getting inside the minds of his characters and shedding light on the emotional conflicts within their individual consciousness. Recommended.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Wonderful story, beautifully told, Déc 27 2003
Par "fleng" (SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
This review is from: Story Of Lucy Gault (Paperback)
I couldn't put this beautiful little book down. It is written with a wonderful Irish lyrical voice. You feel as though you are in a dream. Lucy's story is a sad one, but you don't really feel sad for her. You feel as though life proceeds according to a pre-ordained rhythm unknown to those who live it. William Trevor is a man of sensitive genius.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

2.0étoiles sur 5 A Series of Unfortunate Events...
While my inability to enjoy this book wouldn't prevent me from picking up something else by William Trevor, I have to say that for a relatively short work, this novel was a bit of... Read more
Publié le Fév 3 2005 par Darrell Squires

3.0étoiles sur 5 Even and Dreamy
For some reason, the review of this book in the New York Times put me in a real frenzy to read it. I think because it reminded me of Atonement by Ian McEwan, a book from 2002 that... Read more
Publié le Avril 29 2004 par C M Magee

5.0étoiles sur 5 A masterpiece
As the first novel I have read by William Trevor, The Story of Lucy Gault has me hungering for more by this incredible writer. Read more
Publié le Déc 14 2003

1.0étoiles sur 5 Couldn't make myself finish ...
Boring, boring, boring. It was a struggle to read the two-thirds I managed to finish and I finally had to give up because I just didn't care. Read more
Publié le Nov. 25 2003

2.0étoiles sur 5 Left with an empty feeling
A very sad story on many fronts. A little hard to get into, and once the story develops the plot does not get much better. Read more
Publié le Oct. 28 2003 par Jerry L. McGahagin

5.0étoiles sur 5 Sleepless in Trevor Land
I needn't tell you that William Trevor's The Story of Lucy Gault is exquisitely written, masterfully crafted, and his characters poignantly drawn. Read more
Publié le Oct. 11 2003 par Portia Martin Jeffries

3.0étoiles sur 5 Love the writing, despised Lucy
I gave it three stars because the writing is top-notch, but the story is boring and annoying.

Mr. Trevor writes well. He created the scenes, the feelings. Read more

Publié le Sep 30 2003 par Briefwriter

1.0étoiles sur 5 Boring, Plodding Misery
I loathed this book so much that I was compelled to come here and write a review. I'm on page 212 and I don't think I can bear to make it to the end (page 228). Read more
Publié le Sep 25 2003

4.0étoiles sur 5 Page Turner
I for one couldn't put this book down. The storyline grabbed me and kept me intrigued over the course of two days. Read more
Publié le Sep 4 2003 par debbie

2.0étoiles sur 5 Fades away
This book starts with a very interesting premise that could deliver an emotional and thought-provoking ride regarding quick decisions in life and their consequences. Read more
Publié le Jui 25 2003 par E. M. Otis

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