As he grew, Mrs Wilson, who had no children of her own, took him under her wing, gave him little jobs and helped him along with his reading. - P9

Now, he lived in the town with his wife, Eileen, and their five daughters. - P10

Years later, when he’d gone into the registry office for a copy of his birth certificate, Unknown was all that was written in the space where his father’s name might have been. The clerk’s mouth had bent into an ugly smile handing it out to him, over the counter. - P10

But it cut him, all the same, to see one of his own so upset by the sight of what other children craved and he could not help but wonder if she’d be brave enough or able for what the world had in store. - P16

That evening, when they got home, Eileen said it was well past time they made the Christmas cake. Good-humouredly, she took down her Odlum’s recipe and got Furlong to cream a pound of butter and sugar in the brown delft bowl with the hand mixer while the girls grated lemon rind, weighed and chopped candied peel and cherries, soaked whole almonds in boiled water and slipped them from their skins. For an hour or so they raked through the dried fruit, picking stalks out of sultanas, currants and raisins while Eileen sifted the flour and spice, beat up bantam eggs, and greased and lined the tin, wrapping the outside with two layers of brown paper and tying it, tight, with twine. - P16


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Sometimes Furlong, seeing the girls going through the small things which needed to be done – genuflecting in the chapel or thanking a shop-keeper for the change – felt a deep, private joy that these children were his own. - P11

It took him a moment to answer. ‘Mick Sinnott’s little chap was out on the road again today, foraging for sticks.’ - P11

‘The poor man,’ Furlong said, ‘whatever ails him.’ ‘Drink is what ails him. If he’d any regard for his children, he’d not be going around like that. He’d pull himself out of it.’ ‘Maybe the man isn’t able.’ - P11

Some nights, Furlong lay there with Eileen, going over small things like these. Other times, after a day of heavy lifting or being delayed by a puncture and getting soaked out on the road, he’d come home and eat his fill and fall into bed early, then wake in the night sensing Eileen, heavy in sleep, at his side – and there he’d lie with his mind going round in circles, agitating, before finally he’d have to go down and put the kettle on, for tea. He’d stand at the window then with the cup in his hand, looking down at the streets and what he could see of the river, at the little bits and pieces of goings on: stray dogs out foraging for scraps in the bins; chipper bags and empty cans being rolled and blown roughly about by the driving wind and rain; stragglers from the pubs, stumbling home. Sometimes these stumbling men sang a little. Other times, Furlong would hear a sharp, hot whistle and laughter, which made him tense. He imagined his girls getting big and growing up, going out into that world of men. Already he’d seen men’s eyes following his girls. But some part of his mind was often tense; he could not say why. - P13

It would be the easiest thing in the world to lose everything, Furlong knew. Although he did not venture far, he got around – and many an unfortunate he’d seen around town and out the country roads. The dole queues were getting longer and there were men out there who couldn’t pay their ESB bills, living in houses no warmer than bunkers, sleeping in their overcoats. Women, on the first Friday of every month, lined up at the post-office wall with shopping bags, waiting to collect their children’s allowances. And farther out the country, he’d known cows to be left bawling to be milked because the man who had their care had upped, suddenly, and taken the boat to England. Once, a man from St Mullins got a lift into town to pay his bill, saying that they’d had to sell the Jeep as they couldn’t get a wink of sleep knowing what was owing, that the bank was coming down on them. And early one morning, Furlong had seen a young schoolboy drinking the milk out of the cat’s bowl behind the priest’s house. - P13

The times were raw but Furlong felt all the more determined to carry on, to keep his head down and stay on the right side of people, and to keep providing for his girls and see them getting on and completing their education at St Margaret’s, the only good school for girls in the town. - P14

Christmas was coming. Already, a handsome Norway spruce was put standing in the Square beside the manger whose nativity figures that year had been freshly painted. If some complained over Joseph looking overly colourful in his red and purple robes, the Virgin Mary was met with general approval, kneeling passively in her usual blue and white. The brown donkey, too, looked much the same, standing guard over two sleeping ewes and the crib where, on Christmas Eve, the figure of the infant Jesus would be placed. - P15

When they reached the centre of town, the pipe band and carol singers had already assembled, and Mrs Kehoe was out with a stall, selling slabs of gingerbread and hot chocolate. Joan, who had gone on ahead, was handing out carol sheets with other members of the choir, while the nuns walked around, supervising and talking to some of the more well-off parents. - P15


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인생은 너무도 느리고 희망은 너무도 난폭해
프랑수아즈 사강 지음, 김계영 옮김 / 레모 / 2023년 12월
평점 :
장바구니담기


이십대에 이미 모든 것을 이룬 사강의 스무살 청춘의 삶을 글로 다시 만나게 되네요. 책 디자인마저도 깔끔하면서도 질감이 느껴지니 마치 사강이 직접 제본까지 한 듯 싶네요.

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일기의 문장은 자연스럽고 좀 바보 같고 인간적이고 무엇보다 읽는 사람의 마음을 편하게 해주지요. 훅 뜯어낼 수 있는 시침질처럼 말입니다.

-알라딘 eBook <2023 제14회 젊은작가상 수상작품집> (이미상 외 지음) 중에서 - P52

소설쓰기뿐 아니라 많은 일에서 우리는 ‘하고 싶지만 할 수 없는 일’에 부딪히고 좌절감까지는 아니어도 크고 작은 아쉬움을 느끼는 듯합니다. ‘

-알라딘 eBook <2023 제14회 젊은작가상 수상작품집> (이미상 외 지음) 중에서 - P53

일상적인 날들을, 그 일상이 아무리 세밀하고 아름답게 묘사될지라도! 줄지어 가는 개미들을 엄지로 꾹꾹 눌러 죽이듯 압축시켜 굵직한 줄거리에 복무시킨다. 책 속의 거대한 이야기에서는.

-알라딘 eBook <2023 제14회 젊은작가상 수상작품집> (이미상 외 지음) 중에서 - P54

잘 기억나지는 않지만 당시의 저는 ‘책 속에서라면 눌러 죽일’ 시간, 일상의 시간, 고여 있는 시간, 한 방이 없는 시간, 목경의 시간을 살고 있다고 느꼈던 것 같고 돌파구로서 소설을 쓰기 시작했던 것 같습니다. 글을 쓰는 일은 즐겁습니다. 비록 마감일이 가까워 애를 쓰다보면 글쓰기가 건강을 갉아먹겠구나 느끼지만 그래도 즐겁습니다. 일기든 소설이든 상관없습니다. 언제까지나 그러고 싶습니다.

-알라딘 eBook <2023 제14회 젊은작가상 수상작품집> (이미상 외 지음) 중에서 - P56


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Furlong had come from nothing. Less than nothing, some might say. - P9

It was the first of April, 1946, and some said the boy would turn out to be a fool. - P9

The main of Furlong’s infancy was spent in a Moses basket in Mrs Wilson’s kitchen and he was then harnessed into the big pram beside the dresser, just out of reach of the long, blue jugs. - P9

As a schoolboy, Furlong had been jeered and called some ugly names; once, he’d come home with the back of his coat covered in spit, but his connection with the big house had given him some leeway, and protection. - P10

He was attracted to her shiny black hair and slate eyes, her practical, agile mind. - P10

Now, Furlong was disinclined to dwell on the past; his attention was fixed on providing for his girls, who were black-haired like Eileen and fairly complexioned. - P10


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