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265 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1969



‘You see me as a brash woman. Well, yes, I’m brash. I’m a brash, hard, sick kind of woman: I have no illusions about myself. My marriages failed for unfortunate reasons. I left England because of its unpleasant associations for me: soon I shall have to leave Germany too.’
‘Mrs Sinnott will be ninety-two tomorrow.’
‘Isn’t she a great woman? There’s not many women like that these days, sir. There’s not many that spend a lifetime in silence and would be smiling at ninety-two.’
In Reuben Street the woman who had said to her priest that she was not ungrateful for the life she’d been given was measured by local undertakers. In a public house in York Street the old woman who had begged from Mrs Eckdorf poured the dregs from glasses into a can and thanked the publican for allowing her to do so. The cinema projectionist whom Mrs Eckdorf had called a naughty chap hummed to himself in the projection room of one of the cinemas which children were preparing to enter.
'You are making an ordinary thing seem dramatic when it is not that at all. The truth is simple and unexciting and you are twisting it with sentiment and false interpretations, so that a book will sell to people"
'The one who was my husband last,' said Mrs Eckdorf, 'gave me a taste for cognac. Hans-Otto Eckdorf.'It's difficult to know where to stop the quotation as the flow of words from Mrs Eckdorf is constant. She intends to visit O'Neill's Hotel in Thadeus Street, Dublin after hearing about it from a bartender on a ship. O'Neill's is owned by a deaf ninety-one year-old called Mrs Sinnott who has offered lodging and employment to a number of orphans over the years. The hotel, once grand, has now fallen into disrepair and is suspected of being little more than a brothel. Mrs Eckdorf believes that something terrible happened in the past and that she can help uncover the source of their problems.
'Oh yes?'
'Indeed.' She paused, and then she said: 'That has been my life. A mother, a father who walked away. And then Miss Tample. And then two German businessmen. The only light in my life is my camera.'
'I see.'
'We are the victims of other people.'
'It's often so—'
Morrissey was singularly small, a man in his mid-thirties who had once been compared to a ferret. He had a thin trap of a mouth and greased black hair that he perpetually attended, directing it back from his forehead with a clogged comb. He was dressed now, as invariably he was, in flannel trousers and the jacket of a blue striped suit over a blue pullover, and a shirt that was buttoned to the neck but did not have a tie in its collar.Other characters include Eugene's estranged wife, Philomena, who now lives elsewhere with their son, Timothy John. Timothy John is in love with a girl called Daisy Tulip and he works in an insurance agency under Mr Desmond Gregan, the husband of Enid Gregan, née Sinnott, Eugene's sister. Desmond Gregan dreams of growing and selling tomatoes for a living instead of working in an insurance agency. If that's complicated enough we have a travelling cardboard salesman called Mr Smedley who plays a significant part later on, Mrs Dargan a large prostitute who virtually lives at the Excelsior pub along with Eugene and others.
'Extraordinary things have happened to me in this city,' said Mrs Eckdorf in the bar of her hotel at half-past one on the morning of August 11th. 'You would scarce believe,' she said.