In 1993, aged twenty, Carmel Mc Mahon left Ireland for New York, carrying $500, two suitcases and a ton of unseen baggage. It took years, and a bitter struggle with alcohol addiction, to unpick the intricate traumas of her past and present.
Candid yet lyrical, In Ordinary Time mines the ways that trauma reverberates through time and through individual lives, drawing connections to the events and rhythms of Irelands long Celtic, early Christian and Catholic history. From tragically lost siblings to the broader social scars of the Famine and the Magdalene Laundries, Mc Mahon sketches the evolution of a consciousness from her conservative 1970s upbringing to 1990s New York, and back to the much-changed Ireland of today.
Carmel Mc Mahon grew up in County Meath, and lived in New York City 1993-2021, when she returned to renovate a house on Ireland's west coast. A graduate of CUNY, her writing has been published in the Irish Times, Humanities Review and Roanoke Review, and shortlisted for the Hennessy Literary Award.
Title: In Ordinary Time: Fragments of a Family History
Author: Mahon, Carmel Mc
ISBN: 9780715654477
Binding:
Publisher: Duckworth Books
Publication Date: 2023-02-02
Number of Pages: 256
Weight: 0.3601 kg
'Beautiful, compelling, thought-provoking... An uncompromising reflection on what it means to be of Irish heritage today, whether at home or abroad'
-- Tara Flynn
'Stunning. A work of great emotional and intellectual heft... Truth and honesty shine out of every line'
-- Mary Costello, author of 'Academy Street'
'Painfully familiar in its account of family loss and trauma in the urban working class, and personal enough never to feel like a survey or aerial view of Irish women's history. Sensitively written and quietly devastating, it's the book I had been waiting for'
-- Niamh Campbell, award-winning author of 'This Happy'
'A vivid, evocative and resonant counterpoint of time, memory and meaning'
-- Joseph O'Connor, award-winning author of 'Shadowplay'
'In Ordinary Time is the best kind of memoir, a braid of the personal and political, the spiritual and global'
-- Cameron Dezen Hammon, award-winning author of 'This is My Body'
'Magnificent... Spare, pristine, bracing - a marvellous book'
-- Carlo Gebler, author of 'Confessions of a Catastrophist'
'Quietly addictive, deeply moving and enlightening'
-- Priscilla Morris, author of 'Black Butterflies'