Inventory A memoir

Darran Anderson

Book - 2020

"A memoir of growing up during the Irish Troubles"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Published
New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Darran Anderson (author)
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
"Originally published in 2020 by Chatto & Windus, Great Britain."
Physical Description
406 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780374277581
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Derry, an old walled city on the River Foyle, is a border town in Northern Ireland, within hailing distance of County Donegal in the Republic of Ireland, and it straddles two political worlds: one British, one Irish. Even its official name, Londonderry, is subject to controversy. Anderson recalls growing up in Derry when it was a focal point of the Troubles, and remembers realizing that the British soldiers were not much older than he was, and comparing them to "Roman soldiers on Hadrian's Wall and I was one of the savages." Fifteen years after leaving, he returns to attend the funeral of a cousin and learns that his cousin's son has disappeared. Was he one of the many post-Troubles Derry men who committed suicide? Inventory recalls not only the violence of the place but also the quotidian details of growing up poor, a dreamy kid whose love of books set him apart. But there was no escaping the constant shootings and murders. "Violence begets violence," Anderson writes. An unsparing look at the Troubles through gimlet eyes.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Poverty, suicide, and Northern Ireland's sectarian bloodshed shadow this bleak coming-of-age saga as Anderson (Imaginary Cities) recalls growing up in the 1980s and '90s in a Catholic neighborhood in Derry, site of the 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre of 14 protesters by British soldiers. It's a tense, atmospheric study of life in a war zone: gunfire echoed at night, killing innocents; IRA and Loyalist paramilitaries targeted each other--and suspect civilians--with bombings and shootings; Anderson and his pals dodged army patrols (while the patrols dodged snipers), endured humiliations at checkpoints and faced vicious beatings if they strayed into the wrong street. He also recounts his equally conflicted family history, including his maternal grandfather's domestic violence, his father's boyhood in a squatter camp and stint in the IRA, and his relatives' propensity for drowning, sometimes intentionally, in the River Foyle, a murky, mysterious presence threading through his vivid cityscape of Derry. Anderson's evocative prose takes disasters in stride while measuring their toll with restrained lyricism. ("ll the things they'd owned... were just smoldering ash and debris, charred imitations of what they had once been, in rooms with no roof, under a sky innocent in its ignorance," he writes of an anti-Catholic arson.) The result is a grim but engrossing frontline take on the Troubles. (Aug.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

As with his previous work, Imaginary Cities, Anderson's personal and generational memoir eschews a straightforward narrative for a freer form of nonfiction. Each chapter uses a mundane object--a bird's egg, fences, empty bottles--as pinpoints for reveries on his own working-class youth in Derry, Ireland, and the lives of his parents and grandparents, available to him only through stray photos and carefully edited family stories. Ever-present in both foreground and background is the Northern Ireland conflict and its effects, with the titular chapter simply presenting a six-page prose list of incidents of violence during the Troubles: kidnappings, bombings, murders; injuries and deaths, both deliberate and accidental; along with victims, whether military, paramilitary, or civilian. The effects of this sustained environment of conflict take their toll on each generation of the family, with depression, addiction, and suicide making appearances--but most grim is the culture of near-impermeable silence Anderson finds surrounding the tragedies of both family and country. VERDICT A poetic and brutal reflection on the ways the unspoken past haunts the present, the construction of histories from fragments and secrets, and the physical, mental, and emotional traumas that result when violence becomes part of the daily landscape.--Kathleen McCallister, William & Mary Libs., Williamsburg, VA

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An Irish journalist's memoir of his complicated years growing up in Derry, Northern Ireland, in the 1970s and '80s--and the inevitable family of ghosts and victims. In intimate, beautifully allusive vignettes, Anderson guides readers through his youth, when he was beleaguered by the perpetual violence within his Catholic working-class neighborhood. Despite the turmoil, the author effectively captures moments of charm in the early years--e.g., when he discovered the mysteries of radio, which is all the family had until TV arrived in the '80s. He also conveys his admiration for his bodybuilding, blues-loving father, whose job as a gardener and groundskeeper in the local cemetery was misunderstood at the author's school, where he was considered a "gravedigger." Gradually, the innocent depictions grow more extreme. As conditions between the British and Irish continued to deteriorate--the military had the ability to spy on the locals via radio, and there were frequent bomb scares and armed checkpoints--Anderson felt the peer pressure to act out more outrageously and to partake in the panacea of choice, alcohol. Then the author breaks the narrative into "Da's Folks" and "Ma's Folks." The former delineates grandfather Joseph's humiliating legacy of desertion from the British army during World War II and later self-drowning in 1963 (his wife followed him into the river some years later). In "Ma's Folks," Anderson explores the life of his maternal grandfather, Anthony, a navy man who, though pro-British, "changed his smuggling habits" when the Germans occupied Ireland. Simmering violence bubbles underneath the entire text, often boiling over, and Anderson ably plumbs the salvatory theme of how his peaceable father, despite his mysterious past, helped break the cycle of violence for his son. Though different in mood and tone, this thoughtful memoir will appeal to readers of Patrick Radden Keefe's Say Nothing, among other chronicles of the Troubles. An impressively pensive, impressionistic work from an attentive writer. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.