"The Matchmaker of Kenmare" from Frank Delaney - is a little story about real life

News cover "The Matchmaker of Kenmare" from  Frank Delaney - is a little story about real life
09 Feb 2011 08:26:33 Ben MacCarthy is searching for his wife, who has disappeared without a trace. A writer for the Irish Folklore Commission, Ben travels to Ireland to track and document stories and legends — and chasing rumors of his lost love.
One day, Ben is sent to the home of Kate Begley, who arranges marriages. She uses self-proclaimed "magic," which includes reading the palms of her potential clients.
The novel is primarily a story of longing, and Delaney uses his grasp of language to illustrate the feeling.
Delaney describes the scene as Kate, who lives in Kenmare in a house overlooking the ocean, tells the story of how her parents were lost at sea when she was very young.
"Sitting in the sunlight, with the same deadly sea beating down there, racing like a herd of dragons along the rocky shores and snarling up at us as though we might be their next meal, we leaned on our chairs toward each other and exchanged views of eternal seeking."
Ben decides to accompany Kate to France to work as a spy. He is so enamored with her that he blindly follows her every time she calls. Even though Ireland is technically neutral in the war, Ben and Kate are thrown into violent situations in a volatile continental Europe.
Although "The Matchmaker" is a sequel to Delaney's "Venetia Kelly's Traveling Show," it reads like its own story in the form of a letter from Ben to his twins (he's never met them). Ben's tale is both an account of what happens to him and proof of how telling the story forces him to grow.
 

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