Book description
Bird in the Snow follows twenty-four hours in the life of Birdie
Waters. On the eve of burying her only son, she stays awake all night,
examining old photographs, cherishing memories of Gussie and her
beloved late husband, Alex - a vet who married her because her dancing
ability eclipsed the class difference between them. She recalls
Gussie's tragic death, his failed romance, and Louise, who for a while
looked like the partner that might make her son happy. She remembers
Hughie Donoghue, a flute player whom she has known since her marriage,
and for whom she still feels intense but unspoken affection. When the
funeral is over, and the mourners have all dined in the local hotel,
she returns alone to her house, where each day is a kind of triumph,
because she has survived a little longer. Bird in the Snow is the
story of an old woman whose ordinary life is full of drama, love and
passion, though perhaps nobody knows it but herself, because only she
remembers everything. This delicately rendered narrative evokes the
rural past of Birdie's life in the Irish midlands, using memory to
redress her bereavement through a series of poignant vignettes that
crystallize into a powerful act of retrieval. Harding's writing -
supple, troubled, utterly modern - commences where the traditional
Irish short story dropped from enervation and where Joyce, Beckett and
Myles left off.' - Books Ireland
Michael Harding was born in Cavan in 1953 and has received both the
Stewart Parker Award and an RTÉ Arts Show/Bank of Ireland Award for his
theatre work. The Abbey Theatre has staged Strawboys (1987), Una Pooka
(1989), Misogynist (1990), Hubert Murray's Widow (1993) and Sour Grapes
(1997). The Tinker's Curse was nominated for Best New Play, at the Irish
Times Irish Theatre Awards 2007. His fi ction includes Priest (1986) and
The Trouble with Sarah Gullion (1988). He writes a weekly column,
'Displaced in Mullingar', for The Irish Times and is a member of
Aosdána.