The Edge of Sadness.

Edwin O’Connor’s The Edge of Sadness, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1961, is a pensive, thoughtful character study, centered on a Catholic priest named Hugh Kennedy who, while recovered from a battle with alcoholism, still has a shade of emptiness in his professional and spiritual life, brought into focus by his reconnection with a family he has known since childhood, the Carmodys.

Charlie Carmody, the family patriarch, invites Father Kennedy to his 81st birthday party, making the priest a witness to his continued psychological tormenting of his children while also bringing him back into contact with Charlie’s son John, a priest in Kennedy’s old parish; and daughter Helen. O’Connor manages to flesh out those two characters – Charlie is basically a one-note curmudgeon, but responsible for a fair bit of black comedy – while using all of his secondary characters to help unfold Kennedy’s story and lead him to realize why he isn’t fulfilled in his current life.

It’s not an overtly theological or religious novel, although of necessity we get some internal monologues from Father Kennedy, including one on the difference between rote and thoughtful prayer:

The mechanical act of falling upon one’s knees and saying The Lord’s Prayer every day is one thing and a simple thing, but to say even the first half-dozen words of that prayer with the attention they deserve is quite another and not at all so simple. I think every prayer well said is a shot through a barricade…

Father Kennedy also breaks with the conventional fictional portrayals of priests as angry drunks, molesters, or insipid ciphers. He’s well-developed and reflective, with a sharp, almost sarcastic sense of humor:

“I mean, if you cut your hand off, it hurts; it doesn’t hurt any less simply because a thousand other people may have cut their hands off before you.”
“No, but if you remember all those other hands you may be prevented from hiring a hall and giving a short talk on ‘How I Cut My Hand Off.'”

Where the novel might fail to appeal is its almost complete lack of plot. There’s a long flashback to Father Kennedy’s battle with the bottle, including his time at a rehab facility in the Southwest (where he runs into one of those aforementioned stereotyped priests, perhaps O’Connor’s way of parodying other portrayals), and one major event at the end of the book (and if you don’t see it coming, you’re not paying attention), but the novel is introspective and dwells on its main character and narrator. I found him interesting because he was written realistically and because I found his soliloquies worth reading, but it can be slow and O’Connor’s writing did occasionally drift into wordiness.

Next up: A little light nonfiction – Kingsley Amis’s Everyday Drinking.

Comments

  1. Keith, I know this is not a relevant comment to this post, but I would like to you to ask this: I write for Korean media(independent, or freelancer, should I have to reveal now), and would like to introduce you as a MLB scout by writing an article. For the privacy of both you and me, I think it is better not to reveal all the details here. If you let me know how to contact you via email(I guess you can see my email address when I leave the comment), I will email you back with the details, and you would be able to decide whether you would want to do it or not. Hope I can hear back from you. Thanks.

  2. Klaw, what are/were your impressions of Bobby Valentine as a manager? Think he will return to manage or stick with his ESPN gig next year?

  3. Keith, I just finished Tender is the Night. A little bit dense (Fitz’s vocabulary is obviously way past mine), and I would have liked more from the early years of Dick and Nicole, but I experienced one of my more passionate responses reading the third act and the beautifully drawn out characterizations of the end of things. Very sad, emotional, terrific. Thanks for the recommendation.

  4. Since this is a thread of non-sequitur to the topic: do you know about a comal? I was speaking to a restaurant owner who is building a brick oven comal. Apparently it is for tortillas mainly however other items can go on the comal. Google didn’t have much information outside of for-home-cookware. After pumping her for information (apparently this is her husbands project and why she didn’t satisfy my curiosity) it only left me wanting 1. Tortilla’s 2. information on what a comal is and why it is so great.

    The restaurant, obviously, is not yet open.

  5. I’ve noticed that Keith hasn’t been able to reply to comments on this site lately, he must be very busy.

  6. Could just be mourning Buchholz’s 5 HR performance the other night.

  7. Keith… What’s up with all the site problems at ESPN? The chats are great, but their new format is not great.

  8. “Complete lack of plot.” Are you out of your friggin mind?