The hill bachelors

William Trevor, 1928-2016

Book - 2000

William Trevor has long been hailed as the master of the short story. His new collection, The Hill Bachelors, is an elegant, heartbreaking book about men and women and their missed opportunities. Here we meet four people in a small suburban house, whose lives are frozen in a conspiracy of silence that precludes love's consummation; a nine-year-old who harbors a dream that a movie part will end her fragmented family life; a brother and sister who must forge a new life amid the terrible beauty of Ireland after the Rebellion; and in the title story, a young man who must choose between a life with his longtime love and a life of solitude wedded only to the family farm.

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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Fiction
Published
New York : Viking 2000.
Language
English
Main Author
William Trevor, 1928-2016 (author)
Physical Description
244 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780670893737
  • Three People
  • Of the Cloth
  • Good News
  • The Mourning
  • A Friend in the Trade
  • Low Sunday, 1950
  • Le Visiteur
  • The Virgin's Gift
  • Death of a Professor
  • Against the Odds
  • The Telephone Game
  • The Hill Bachelors
Review by Booklist Review

Still, after all these years, Trevor continues to be one of the finest practitioners of the short story in English. As each new collection appears, he never fails to demonstrate an immaculate mastery of the form, and this latest volume will once again prompt a re-appreciation of his remarkable ability to tailor his talent to fit the special needs of each one of his stories. In general, all the stories deal with the major disappointments and small rewards that life brings, particularly within the arena of love. Of course, there are some stories that stand out above the rest, and the flagship of the fleet is the title story, a brilliant tale encapsulating everything that gives the best short fiction its crystalline edge. In "The Hill Bachelors," set in Trevor's native rural Ireland, a young man by the name of Paulie has been gone for 11 years from the farm where he was born. What precipitates his return is the death of his father; Paulie knows that his brothers and sisters have assumptions about his continued stay on the farm to care for his mother; after all, he is still a bachelor. Another story, "Three People," is beguilingly not straightforward, showing Trevor's artful use of nontraditional technique. There is an atmosphere of threat and mystery in this story that is hard to resist^-or forget. No story here is anything less than a bravura performance. --Brad HooperAdult Books Young adult recommendations in this issue have been contributed by the Books for Youth editorial staff and by reviewers Nancy Bent, GraceAnne A. DeCandido, Patty Engelmann, Sally Estes, Sharon Greene, Leone McDermott, and Candace Smith. Titles recommended for teens are marked with the following symbols: YA, for books of general YA interest; YA/C, for books with particular curriculum value; YA/L, for books with a limited teenage audience; YA/M, for books best suited to mature teens.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

With the recent death of V.S. Pritchett, Trevor is arguably the best short story writer working in the English language, and these stories are up to his own highest standards. Trevor simply knows so much, moving effortlessly between Irish rural settings, like that of the title story, and the world of the sophisticated English art historians at the heart of " A Friend in the Trade." He is equally able to inhabit the worlds of priests, restless American expatriates and quarrelsome academics, always with an acute sense of their wide range of voices and habits of mind. His effects are quiet but no less telling for that, and his understated endings are achieved with mastery. One of the best of an outstanding bunch is "The Mourning," the story of a simple Irish laborer who nearly gets to plant a bomb in London for the IRA, until he thinks better of it; the subtle way he is drawn into thinking he can perform such a desperate act says more about the Troubles than many a full-length novel. "Good News" is a heartrending account of a young girl hoping a minor film role will help bring her family together. "The Telephone Game" is a psychologically astute study of an about-to-be-married young couple who come perilously close to finding out too much about each other at the last moment. "The Virgin's Gift" is an utter change of pace, an intensely poetic story of faith and redemption that reads like a myth. "Against the Odds" is a delicious study of a woman who is a confidence trickster against her own better instincts. "Of the Cloth" is a penetrating tale of the impact a small act of kindness has over the years. Work like this reveals a perfectly crafted story as one of the true gems of literature. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

This is the newest short story collection from prolific Irish writer Trevor. Each of the 12 stories is a carefully crafted exploration of how a single act or event can alter a life's course. In several of the stories, loss and yearning prevail, and yet the collection as a whole is not bleak, for many of Trevor's characters are redeemed by small acts of personal courage. In "Of the Cloth," a Church of Ireland priest, living in an isolated and declining rural parish, discovers "the task he'd been given" and comes to find solace in knowing that his act of kindness brought meaning to another's life. In "The Virgin's Gift," a reclusive monk questions the meaning of his faith and the quest he is given only to discover a gift that is greater then any he could previously have imagined. In "The Mourning," Liam Pat is a simple Irish laborer working in England who is taken in by a dubious mentor but finds within himself the personal strength to act on his own best instincts. While the situations that begin some of the stories seem somehow familiar, every story includes a revealing moment that captures the reader's imagination and evokes strong feelings for the characters involved. Highly recommended.DCaroline Hallsworth, Sudbury P.L., Ont. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A solid ninth collection of 12 varied, moving stories by the Anglo-Irish master (most recently, the novel Death in Summer, 1998). All the usual Trevor themes are here, with sometimes subtle, sometimes merely minimal variations. The outsider who threatens a complacent marriage or other settled existence assumes nicely differentiated forms in "Three People" (a perfectly awful title), in which a man and woman are both united and paralyzed by "the love that came . . . through their pitying of each other"; "A Friend in the Trade," whose importunate closeness to a married couple ends in his virtual banishment from their orbit; and "Against the Odds," in which a lonely widower is fleeced by a pragmatic traveling woman, who thereafter won't be able to forget him. Solitude saturates "Of the Cloth," an elderly rural priest's lament for his faith's inglorious present; and, notably, "The Virgin's Gift," in which a long-cloistered cleric is mysteriously sent back out into the world, to become the long-delayed comfort of his parents' old age. A few stories--such as "Good News," about a child "actress" seeking a more comforting world than the one created by her separated parents; "Low Sunday, 1950," a tepid rehash of Trevor's overrated novel Fools of Fortune; and "Le Visiteur," a Maupassant-like anecdote set on a Channel island--seem simply inert on the page. But two pieces are superb. "The Mourning" takes an unassuming Irish lad to London for work, unwanted complicity with the IRA, and an ensuing lifetime of uncertainty as to whether he has acted as a decent man or as a coward and traitor. And the marvelous title story depicts the passive resignation of a rural family's youngest son, who renounces his chances for happiness, returning to serve his widowed mother's needs, knowing that "the hills had waited for him, claiming one of their own." Here and there the fabric shows signs of wear, yet the workmanship remains as exquisite, as sure and strong, as ever. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Three People On the steps of the Scheles' house, stained glass on either side of the brown front door, Sidney shakes the rain from his plastic mackintosh, taking it off to do so. He lets himself into the small porch, pauses for a moment to wipe the rain from his face with a handkerchief, then rings the bell of the inner door. It is how they like it, his admission with a key to the porch, then this declaration of his presence. They'll know who it is: no one else rings that inner bell. `Good afternoon, Sidney,' Vera greets him when the bolts are drawn back and the key turned in the deadlock. `Is still raining, Sidney?' `Yes. Getting heavy now.' `We did not look out.' The light is on in the hall, as it always is except in high summer. Sidney waits while the bolts are shot into place again, the key in the deadlock turned. Then he hangs his colourless plastic coat on the hall-stand pegs. `Well, there the bathroom is,' Vera says. `All ready.' `Your father -' `Oh, he's well, Sidney. Father is resting now. You know: the afternoon.' `I'd hoped to come this morning.' `He hoped you would, Sidney. At eleven maybe.' `The morning was difficult today.' `Oh, I don't mind, myself.' In the bathroom the paint tins and brushes and a roller have been laid out, the bath and washbasin covered with old curtains. There is Polyfilla and white spirit, which last week Sidney said he'd need. He should have said Polyclens, he realizes now, instead of the white spirit; better for washing out the brushes. `You'd like some tea now, Sidney?' Vera offers. `You'd like a cup before you begin?' Vera has sharp cheek-bones and hair dyed black because it's greying. The leanness in her face is everywhere else too; a navy-blue skirt is tight on bony hips, her plain red jumper is as skimpy as a child's, clinging to breasts that hardly show. Her large brown eyes and sensuous lips are what you notice, the eyes expressionless, the lips perhaps a trick of nature, for in other ways Vera does not seem sensuous in the least. `Tea later.' Sidney hesitates, glancing at Vera, as if fearing to offend her. `If that's all right?' And Vera smiles and says of course it's all right. There is a Danish pastry, she says, an apricot Danish pastry, bought yesterday so she'll heat it up. `Thanks, Vera.' `There's Father, waking now.' Lace Cap is the colour chosen. Sidney pours it into the roller dish and rolls it on to the ceiling, beginning at the centre, which a paint-shop man advised him once was the best way to go about it. The colour seems white but he knows it isn't. It will dry out a shade darker. A satin finish, suitable for a bathroom. `The tiling,' Mr Schele says in the doorway when Sidney has already begun on the walls. `Maybe the tiling.' Clearing away his things - his toothbrush and his razor - Mr Schele noticed the tiling around the washbasin and the bath. In places the tiling is not good, he says. In places the tiles are perhaps a little loose, and a few are cracked. You hardly notice, but they are cracked when you look slowly, taking time to look. And the rubber filler around the bath is discoloured. Grubby, Mr Schele says. `Yes, I'll do all that.' `Not the tiling before the paint, heh? Not finish the tiling first maybe?' Sidney knows the old man is right. The tile replacement and the rubber should be done first because of the mess. That is the usual way. Not that Sidney is an expert, not that he decorates many bathrooms, but it stands to reason. `It'll be all right, Mr Schele. The tiling's not much, two or three to put in.' While the undercoat on the woodwork is drying he'll slip the new tiles in. He'll cut away the rubber and squeeze in more of it, a tricky business, which he doesn't like. He has done it only once before, behind the sink in the kitchen. While it's settling he'll gloss the woodwork. `You're a good man, Sidney.' He works all afternoon. When Vera brings the Danish pastry and tea, and two different kinds of biscuits, she doesn't linger because he's busy. Sidney isn't paid for what he does, as he is for all his other work - the club, delivering the leaflets or handing them out on the street, depending on what's required. He manages on what he gets; he doesn't need much because there is no rent to pay. Just enough for food, and the gas he cooks it on. The electricity he doesn't have to pay for; clothes come from the charity shop. They let him live above the club because there's a room. At night he takes the ticket money, protected in his kiosk by Alfie and Harry at the door; in the daytime he cleans up after the night before and takes the phone messages. All the club's facilities are his to make use of, which he appreciates. Sidney is thirty-four now, thirty-four and one week and two days. He had just turned twenty when he first helped Vera. In Mr Schele's house they do not ever mention that. They do not talk about a time that was distressing for Vera, and for Mr Schele too. But when Sidney's not in the house, when he's private and on his own, in his room above the club, he talks to himself about it. `Shining armour,' he repeats because it said that in the paper; still says it if he wants to look. Knight in Shining Armour, all across the page. Sometimes, when he's trying to get to sleep, he lies there polishing the armour, laying all the pieces out, unfolding cloths, setting out the Duraglit and the Goddard's. `Sidney, you stay with us for supper tonight?' There is enough, Vera assures him. Another cup of rice will make it enough, and she recites this Saturday's menu: chicken cooked her way and her good salad, strudel and just a little cream. Then Casualty on the TV, five past eight. It is a plea, occasionally made when Sidney is in the house as late as this. Vera begs for company with her invitation, Sidney finds himself reflecting; for another presence besides her elderly father. Vera would have been glad when he didn't come in the morning because he'd have finished earlier, too long before supper, and staying to lunch is never the same. `I should be getting on.' `Oh, do stay with us.' And Sidney does. He sits with Mr Schele in the sitting-room and there's an appetizer, salty little pretzels Vera has bought. No drink accompanies these. Mr Schele talks about his childhood. `The big rosebush has blown down,' Sidney interrupts, standing by the window now. `This wind has taken it.' Mr Schele comes to look and sorrowfully shakes his head. `Maybe the roots are holding,' he suggests. `Maybe a little can be done.' Sidney goes through the kitchen to the garden. `No,' he says when they all three sit down to eat: the roots have snapped in the fall. The news upsets Mr Schele, who remembers the rose being planted, when Vera was a child. He'll not see another rose grown to that size in the garden, he predicts. He blames himself, but Vera says no and Sidney points out that even roses come to an end. A strudel enriched with sultanas follows the chicken cooked Vera's way and her good salad, and then they stand in the bathroom doorway, surveying Sidney's work. The bathroom is as new, Mr Schele says, greatly cheered by the sight of it. It is the bathroom as it was the day the house was built. Everything except the linoleum on the floor, which has been there since 1951, Mr Schele calculates. `A nice new vinyl,' Mr Schele suggests, and Vera adds that not much is necessary. Two metres and three-quarters, a metre wide: she measured it this morning. `You lay it down, Sidney?' Mr Schele enquires. `You lay it for us?' They know he will. If Vera chooses what she wants and brings the piece back to the house he'll lay it. There is adhesive left over from the time he laid the surround in Mr Schele's small bedroom. In windy weather draughts came up through the cracks between the floorboards, the bedroom being on the ground floor. There's been no trouble since Sidney cut out the vinyl surround and stuck it down, except that Mr Schele still can't get used to the colour, shades of marbled orange. `For a bathroom,' he states his preference now, `we keep to pale, heh?' To go with the Lace Cap, Vera agrees. Maybe even white, to go with the bath and washbasin and the tiles. A flush of pink has crept into Vera's hollow cheeks, and Sidney - knowing Vera well - knows it is there in anticipation of the treat that lies ahead: choosing the floor material, the right weight for bathroom use, a shade to match the paint or the porcelain. `You can wait another minute, Sidney?' Vera says, and briefly goes away, returning with a piece of card she has torn from a cornflakes packet. `You brush the paint on that for me, Sidney?' she requests, and Sidney does so and washes out the brush again. His Stanley knife slipped when he was cutting the orange vinyl for the bedroom; he had to have three stitches and a tetanus injection. `Time for the hospital programme,' Mr Schele reminds Vera, who's disappointed when Sidney shakes his head. Not this Saturday, he explains, because he's on early turn at the club. `You're good to come, Sidney,' Vera says in the porch, whispering as she always does when she says that. She's older than Sidney, forty-one; she was twenty-seven when he first helped her, the time of her distress. `It's nothing,' he says before he leaves, his unchanging valediction. From the Trade Paperback edition. Excerpted from The Hill Bachelors by William Trevor, William Trevor All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.