Monday, April 9, 2012

If It Hadn't Been for the Child: Anne Enright

Anne Enright, who visits RPI on April 18th, writes in her new novel, The Forgotten Waltz (2011), about a child caught in the strife caused by an adulterous love affair:

"IF IT HADN'T BEEN FOR THE CHILD then none of this might have happened, but the fact that a child was involved made everything that much harder to forgive. Not that there is anything to forgive, of course, but the fact that a child was mixed up in it all made us feel that there was no going back; that it mattered. The fact that a child was affected meant we had to faceourselves properly, we had to follow through. "

"She was nine when it started, but that hardly matters. I mean her age hardly matters because she was always special—isn’t that the word? Of course all children are special, all children are beautiful. I always thought Evie was a bit peculiar, I have to say: but also that she was special in the oldfashioned sense of the word. There was a funny, offcentre beauty to her. She went to an ordinary school, but there was, even at that stage, an amount of ambivalence about Evie, the sense of things unsaid. Even the doctors—especially the doctors—kept it vague, with their, 'Wait and see.'" More in Caravan magazine.