TN2 Summer Issue 20/21

Page 22

Literature

I

Is Nicole Flattery the new Lorrie Moore?

t’s been a year since Nicole Flattery’s debut collection of short stories, Show Them A Good Time, was reviewed in this magazine. This review was one of the few that didn’t compare Flattery to Lorrie Moore and, indeed, “the next Lorrie Moore” or “90s Moore” look set to become the tags by which her style is referred to – even if, as a young female graduate of English Studies at Trinity, her subject matter will inevitably be compared to Sally Rooney’s. The epigraph for Flattery’s debut is from Moore’s story “Four Calling Birds, Three French Hens”. Comparisons to Moore, along with the detail from Alice Maher’s Yggdrasil on Fergal Condon’s brilliant yellow cover design for Flattery’s book, indicate that this promising young writer has been given our collective blessing to take up the mantle of the next female virtuoso – a much beloved artistic talent whose work is not only technically accomplished but really engages its audience. Faber & Faber published Moore’s Collected Stories in 2009, a collection that begins with four new stories – which were later included in Bark (2014) – before diving into her back catalogue. The technical accomplishment of these newer stories is a propitious step forward in Moore’s writing, and offers a tantalising glimpse into what Flattery’s obvious talent might develop into. Both writers are frequently praised for their humour. But while Flattery and “90s Moore” derive most of their comedy from details that are either incidental to or don’t quite fit into the dramatic framework of their stories, 21st Century Moore, particularly in “Debarking”, allows the eccentricity of fully developed external characters to bring comedy into the fold of the story’s dramatic arc. Incidentally, Moore’s comedy is real comedy – laugh out loud – not just the half-funny stuff we pretend is good enough because it appears in a work of literary fiction. I don’t find Flattery as funny as Moore, in fact I don’t think she’s trying to be. At the same time, the attention Flattery pays to the trickiness of narration is, for me, the most striking and exciting aspect of her work, and not something I notice Moore engaging with much. Flattery opens up fascinating gaps between a close third person narrator and the psychology of the character they’re supposed to be telling us about. Where Moore’s characters negotiate professional, familial, and romantic relationships, Flattery’s protagonists dominate their stories almost to the exclusion of everyone else. “Abortion, A Love Story” is her only story with more than one character who’s more than a shade, and I think it’s her best (it’s also by far the longest, which bodes well for Flattery’s upcoming novel). When reviewing books, we tend to compare younger writers to older ones because that’s the only thing that means anything, really. Adjectives are too subjective – what’s “enthralling” to me might not be to you, and whether something is “provocative” is largely a matter of taste. Properly engaging with a writer’s work is tantamount to a good review. Book reviews also serve, however, to tell us whether we might be interested in buying the book; to this end, saying something like “Nicole Flattery is the next Lorrie Moore” or “Claire Keegan is the spiritual successor to John McGahern” is of much more use, despite the inevitable inaccuracies. Moore might be the best short story writer working in the US today; Flattery is a talented, exciting Irish prospect. You should be reading them both.

WORDS BY FIACHRA KELLEHER 18


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Articles inside

Coronavirus Paintings // Frieda Hughes in Lockdown

3min
page 23

Is Nicole Flattery The New Lorrie Moore?

2min
page 22

A Beginner’s Guide to Foraging

3min
pages 16-17

Dating Amber // Review

2min
page 15

Film Club 1: Fruitvale Station

10min
pages 12-14

Harajuku - A Fashion Epicentre For All

5min
pages 10-11

Fashion History 101 Sybil Connolly: The Waterford woman who put Irish fabrics on an international stage

3min
pages 8-9

What Jean-Michel Basquiat’s ‘Defacement’ (1983) Means Today

4min
pages 6-7

Memes : A Cultural Currency

2min
page 46

The Death of Mainstream Media?

6min
pages 44-45

What I Learned From My Experience as a TV Background Actor

6min
pages 38-39

The Stark Realities of the Publishing World

11min
pages 43-48

The Transphobia of J.K Rowling

4min
page 42

Groundhog Day: The Trope that Comes Up Again and Again and Again

6min
pages 40-41

Fetch the Bolt Cutters - Fiona Apple // Review

4min
pages 24-25

The Theatricality of the Plague

6min
pages 34-36

A Eulogy for E3

6min
pages 18-19

Theatre. Online

3min
page 37

Long Live Vinyl - The Resurgence of Records

5min
pages 26-27

The Performative Nature of Dating

5min
pages 32-33

Clued-up about Contraception?

7min
pages 28-31

When Does Gender in a Video Game Actually Matter?

12min
pages 20-23
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