24 July 2025
My first encounter with the Irish author Colm Tóibín was watching the 2015 film of his novel 'Brooklyn' which follows Eilis Lacey, a young Irish woman who immigrates to New York in the early 1950s. So I was intrigued to see that he had written a sequel, 'Long Island', which revisits Eilis twenty years later when family events take her back again to her childhood home of Enniscorthy in County Wexford. I've just finished reading 'Long Island' (as an unabridged audio book, brilliantly narrated by Jessie Buckley) and it has made me long to read more by Colm Tóibín. His writing is very careful and delicate, beautifully constructing the period detail of 1970s New York and Ireland - such as the practicalities of coin-operated telephone boxes but also the attitudes and behaviours of the people in each community at that time. I was very lucky, a few weeks ago, to have the opportunity to see Colm Tóibín speaking about 'Long Island' at the University of Manchester, as part of the Manchester Literature Festival. He gave a fascinating description of his writing process, explaining how he likes to put characters into a particular situation to see how they would react. And he spoke about the recurring feature of the book which tells the reader what each of the main characters are thinking they should say to each other, before they actually say something quite different. This creates an often painfully polite, sometimes funny and occasionally achingly sad 1970s Irish comedy of manners. 'Long Island' is a measured, gentle story of impossible decisions put-off and the inevitable consequences - a slow motion collision of jigsaw pieces that are never going to quite fit together.