Denis Hamill
I was attracted to this book because
of the recommendation on its cover, suggested by Frank
McCourt who wrote Angela's Ashes. That, plus a
browse which revealed that it was quick-paced and featured
Irish life and a fiery, red-haired woman.
I don't know what kind of reputation
Denis Hamill has; sometimes this is useful, and sometimes
I enjoy novels - and films, for that matter - which are
not widely recognised and yet have much to recommend them.
I enjoy them not because everyone else is, but for other
reasons. In some way, they express or connect to some
of my inner thoughts, feelings and interests.
Fork in the Road concerns the
tempestuous relationship between Colin Coyne, an American
film maker, and Gina Furey, an Irish traveller. She tries
to pick his pocket in a crowded Dublin pub, and he falls
for her wild beauty. They travel backwards and forwards
across the Atlantic, Colin feeling committed but not necessarily
in love, because she carries and gives birth to his child.
His mother has recently died, and he promised her he would
never abandon a child.
It's a long book - about 470 pages -
and I think it's main achievement is the pace it manages
to sustain. It's a fast moving story, addressing the interior
life of Colin Coyne but not dwelling on it. Characters
are satisfactory, but not comprehensive. The main thrust
is the collision between civilised 20th century life and
the embattled, conniving and thieving lifestyle of Gina
and her family. They live on the dole, steal from anyone
at every opportunity, and enjoy drunkenness, smoking,
and a feeling of being accountable to no one. Gina's extended
family includes a pyromaniac, demented grandparents, violent
and murderous men, and sexually manipulative women.
Colin's family are successful, normal,
US citizens who cannot understand his infatuation. Colin
supports Gina and family members who stay with them for
many months, their flights from Dublin also paid for.
They wreck his brothers apartment and Colin's own house,
burn down Colin's local bar, steal his father's tools
and some hanging silver bells with immense sentimental
value, constantly embarrass him with their primitive,
hostile and coarse manners, survey everyone for casual
theft, and get mixed up with formidable American gangsters.Hamill
includes a section where you learn about Gina's earlier
life, which explains her behaviour: years of poverty,
neglect, privations and abusive uncles.
If the most powerful man in the world
was almost toppled by a poorly judged sexual relationship
famously involving a cigar, then Colin's sexual attraction
is believable. Sometimes, the body leads the mind unwisely.
It's fun reading about Gina initially,
because of her sexual appeal. However you start to dislike
her immensely, and not care very much about her earlier
life, because it cannot excuse the way she exploits Colin
and everyone else. She avoids censure and retaliation
for her behaviour in Ireland, but gets into trouble when
she continues in the same way in Los Angeles and New York.
In the end, she tries to steal a wallet in a public crowd
and the man tells his girlfriend to recover it: she knifes
and kills her. Hamill suggests that the menace and potential
violence of America is more savage and formidable than
Irish mischief.
You are meant to feel sympathy for Gina,
and the way Colin's lifestyle is imposed on her. She is
stranded in a huge and foreign country, with no reference
points and the "crack" that she always wants. Hamill is
interested in the culture of Irish travellers, and researched
it for his book. However, Gina's behaviour starts to annoy
you - the reader - and you hope she will get her comeuppance.
Hamill's portrayal is bleak; Gina's earlier life does
not excuse her adult irresponsibility, which includes
insisting on drinking and smoking when pregnant, entirely
unconcerned for her baby's well being. We learn that in
Europe, Ireland has the highest incidence of FAS - foetal
alcohol syndrome, and it's sad and appalling deformities.
Colin finally decides he will not tolerate
it any longer, and confronts both her and her family when
he returns from a film making trip. He beats up her pyromaniac
brother and enlists the help of bar friends to beat up
the other men, in satisfying revenge. Finally taking a
stand is a complicated decision, because he loves his
small son and Brianna, who is effectively his step-daughter.
He wants custody of both, and will not allow them to return
to the neglectful and squalid subculture on the outskirts
of an Irish city.
Hamill is probably accurate in his portrayal
of subculture hostility towards mainstream and more civilised
values. In this respect, it illustrates not Irish travellers,
but any disenfranchised and violent community with its
own primitive and internal values. We experience this
in any city whenever we see reckless disregard for the
property, life and well being of other citizens. Hamill
is not political, but this dimension to his novel clearly
exists. However, I am not especially interested in cultural
politics here - which is often the idiom by which novels
and films are ultimately judged.
The other main theme of this book is
Colin's interior thought process, as he imagines the cinematic
and narrative potential in his outer experiences. In the
beginning, you wonder if the novel is about imperialist
America exploiting the real life circumstances of less
privileged people. Gina herself protests to Colin that
he has stolen from her - that he has used her life and
his experiences with her as the basis for a film script.
The inequality of power is clear, but Colin is essentially
generous and decent, and gives her new experiences and
opportunities; her remark is no more than an angry attack,
and is one of many. He endures wide ranging abuse, not
because he wants to make a film about it - although he
does remind himself it is like research and development
- but because he is committed to the children. Everyone
around him thinks he is crazy to allow his life to be
seriously disrupted, and he misses the opportunity to
direct a lucrative film because he returns to Ireland
to see Gina.
I only had one real problem with the
book, and that is the element of male-fantasy in Colin's
characterisation. Firstly, women phone him and he ignores
them, as they want to re-establish prior relationships.
He beds an interesting, beautiful and sexy Californian
with a rich and influential father, who probably has considerably
more sexual power than he does. He has women chasing after
him, and never doubts himself. Secondly, he is able to
beat up one of Gina's cousins who is enormously strong
and far more familiar with fighting than he is; he knocks
out Gina's husband when he finally appears (Colin did
not know he existed), who is also tough and muscular;
and he knocks out Gina's pyromaniac brother with a short,
six inch punch to the jaw.
None of this is really accounted for
- you are asked to believe that Colin is sexually magnetic
and physically formidable, and it is not convincing. He
is a creative, an American film maker, but these parts
of his character make him more like a stereotyped tough-guy.
Fork in the Road is a good
read; as it says on the cover, it "hooks you and keeps
you to the end" (Frank McCourt).