Book description
In this astonishing volume of autobiography, John Moriarty's
earlier works of mystical philosophy, Dreamtime and Turtle Was Gone a
Long Time, are given a biographical grounding. Inhabited by all that
he reads and perceives, Moriarty recovers lost forms of sensibility
and categories of understanding, reconciling them gloriously within
the arc of his life. Nostos is a Greek word meaning 'homecoming'. In
its plural form, nostoi, it was the name of an extensive body of
literature in ancient Greece about the Greek heroes who returned from
the Trojan Wars. Most of this literature has perished, but we do
have The Odyssey, describing the long homecoming of Odysseus to
Ithaca. Moriarty's book assumes that for various reasons humanity is
now exiled from the earth, but by reimagining it and ourselves as
involved in a common destiny, it enacts a homecoming, a nostos to it.
Nostos is a continuous narrative describing early on how its author
lost his world as surely and completely as the Aztecs lost theirs when
Cortez came ashore. Thereafter, in places as far apart as neolithic
North Kerry and London, Periclean Athens and Blackfoot Dancing Ground,
Manitoba and Mexico, Kwakiutl coast and Connemara, the author fights
his way to a kind of rest, to a requiem, at the heart of things as
they terribly and resplendently are. 'The classical, Eastern and
Amer-Indian legends that have informed Moriarty's life are recreated
or re-enacted in this deeply personal document, which is paradoxically
rich in encounters with the physical world and tender episodes of love
and loss, while giving us a disturbing insight into the terrors and
rare ecstasies of the hermit's lonely struggle.' - Tim Robinson
John Moriarty was born in North Kerry in 1938 and educated at
Listowel and University College Dublin. He taught English literature at
the University of Manitoba in Canada for six years, before returning to
Ireland in 1971. He is author of Dreamtime (1994), and the
trilogy Turtle Was Gone a Long Time: Crossing the
Kedron(1996), Horsehead Nebula Neighing (1997) and Anaconda Canoe
(1998).