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In his first collection of fiction, Justin Cronin proves himself a
deft chronicler of everyday American life. The eight connected stories
in Mary and O'Neil find their nexus in the character of
O'Neil Burke, who, in the beginning of the book, is a smart,
amiable young man attending a pristine New England college.
After both his parents die while he's away at school, the
touchstones of O'Neil's life — his wedding day, the
illness of his sister Kay, a surreal visit to his childhood
home — become tinged with puzzlement and grief. But his
parents' death is also an unforeseen source of strength: later
in the novel, watching his sister reading a book in bed with her sons,
O'Neil reflects: "A piercing loneliness touched him, and
he realized, with a start, that it wasn't his parents he was
thinking of, or even Kay. He was thinking of his wife and daughters.
He longed to hold them in his arms." Like a well-crafted poem,
Cronin juxtaposes the narrative of O'Neil's life with the
white space of his parents' death.
It is Mary who ultimately provides solace to O'Neil's
grief and wanderlust. He meets her as a young woman while backpacking
through Italy. Standing at a map behind Pitti Palace, she is amused by
his broken Italian ("Dove siamo: Where are we?"), he by
her charisma and tenacity. But it is their mutual sense of loss (she
has given up a baby) that brings them together.
As Mary and O'Neil create a life together, what becomes apparent
is their lingering sense of innocence. This is a couple whose
accumulated loss has shadowed them into adulthood. Unlike the
sharp-edged innocence of Holden Caulfield, however, their innocence
emerges organically: through the measured and lyrical prose. In their
early days as a couple, for instance, Cronin writes: "Their love
was eclectic and sensual — O'Neil, for instance, sometimes
placed his nose against Mary's cheek simply to smell her skin,
or bathed in the water she had just used — and their lovemaking
surprised them with its ease. So many years of nervousness; why had no
one told them that sex was meant to be funny, and that they could say
the things they wanted to and ask for what they liked?"
In another scene, O'Neil waits in a hospital, exhausted after
the birth of his first child. Though it is nearing midnight, he dials
the telephone number of his deceased parents on a whim. A woman
answers, and believing O'Neil to be someone she knows, tells him
to come home.
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