(8/7/2023)
Anne Enright's latest book, "The Wren, the Wren" is filled with beautiful prose with gorgeous sentences and descriptions of the landscape, flowers and birds. It's also a generational story told by mother and daughter in styles reflective of their personalities and the social norms of their time. Carmel's father, an Irish poet of some renown, walks out on his sick wife and two young daughters leaving them to make some sense of their own lives and their emotional development.
This book is not a story told in traditional narrative form but, rather: a stream of consciousness as each character ponders their own thoughts and choices and relationships with men, their peers and each other. Despite their life choices and their struggles with relationships, mother and daughter each come to realize their inheritance from their father/grandfather and how it ties them together despite their own emotional differences. This book invites a different kind of discussion, one that focuses on the beauty of language, words used to describe sound, nature, art and landscape. There is also another discussion point of view centering on relationships between men and women and self judgement. In the end, the poetry and the language won me over.