Book description
"The poet W. B. Yeats desired to produce written work that,
while it had been arduously crafted, would appear as immediate and
spontaneous as the ordinary spoken words of people. It is a testament
to the achievement of Rory O'Connor that he has accomplished just that
by writing a memoir that connects closely to the oral tradition. ...
It could be hoped, perhaps, that every community - urban and rural -
would have a Rory O'Connor among them who would possess the ability of
capturing that society in all its vitality, colour and mystery. If
that were possible they would - like this present book - make for
fascinating reading." -Derek Hand, Sunday Business Post. "I
loved the book ... I carried Rory O'Connor's vivid images and phrases
around with me in my imagination long after I had finished reading. He
seems to have had the type of magical, untrammelled childhood,
populated with extraordinary characters, to which we have all
aspired." - Deirdre Purcell. "Gander at the Gate is the best
book of its kind since Twenty Years A-Growing. It is vibrant,
humorous, delightful, nostalgic and deeply moving to the point of
tears ... The characters are wonderful, especially Uncle Jack, who
deserves a book to himself sometime. This is a book full of the
magical lunacies of a family and it is also a history of a troubled
time in which the author's father was a major figure ... I shall read
it again and again." - John B. Keane. "Rory O'Connor is a
gifted writer, so gifted, in fact, that he can turn the reader into a
listener. O'Connor's style of writing is also a style of oral telling.
And he is a master storyteller, evoking what he calls "the
wonders of life" with consummate skill. He deals with a past that
ranges from the gentle to the murderous, the violent and grim to the
humorous and fantastical. Gander at the Gate is completely authentic,
a gripping feat of memory, a candid, detailed evocation of a lost
world." -Brendan Kennelly. Knocknagoshel, north Kerry, in the
1930s. Autumn mornings with mist rolling over a 'kindly and fertile
land'; the pungent smoke of turf fires; open-air wrestling contest;
convoys of tinkers with their piebald ponies; farm boys and servant
girls aching with desire; and a cast of remarkable men and even more
remarkable women, fiery and forthright, their lives 'teeming with the
emotions of love and jealousy, and human conflict, common among all
the simple people of the world'. Through the lyrical prose of Rory
O'Connor, Gander at the Gate tells of an Irish farmhouse, the family
who lived there, and the community of which they were part. We
discover the imaginings and adventures of the local 'goboys'; the
widow Delia and her sons lost to America; and the eccentric Uncle
Jack, full of 'riddles, and recitations, and the latest rhymes and
small poems'. As the gander of the title - the fiercest beast of the
farmyard - begins to intrude on his consciousness, O'Connor describes
his father's experience of Ireland's civil war. This is the most
magical evocation of people and place to be published in recent Irish
literature. Rory O'Connor gives a potent life to the ghosts of time in
a book that has all the hallmarks of a classic.
Rory O'Connor was born in 1928. A former journalist with the Irish
Press and news editor of the Sunday Press, he was also head of RTE's
television news for fifteen years until his retirement in 1993. In the
1980s he was elected Honorary Chieftain of the newly former O'Connor
Kerry clan. In 1997 he was executive producer of Rivers of Words, a
series of five television films on leading Kerry writers.