Mary Josephine Lavin wrote short stories and novels,
and she is now regarded as a pioneer in the field of women's writing.
She is particularly noteworthy for her stories on the
topic of widowhood, which are considered her finest.
Mary Lavin was born in East Walpole, Massachusetts, EUA,
in 1912, the only child of Tom and Nora Lavin, an immigrant Irish couple. She
attended primary school in East Walpole until the age of nine, when her mother
decided to go back to Ireland. Initially, Mary lived in Athenry, in County
Galway, in the West Coast. Afterwards, her parents bought a house in Dublin.
Mary attended Loreto College, a convent school in
Dublin, before going on to study English and French at University College
Dublin. She taught French at Loreto College for a while. As a postgraduate
student, she published her first short story, "Miss Holland", which
appeared in the Dublin Magazine in 1938.
In 1943, Mary published her first book, Tales from
Bective Bridge, a volume of ten short stories about life in rural Ireland;
it was a critical success and won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for
fiction
In 1954 her husband died. Lavin, with her reputation
as a major writer already well established, was left to confront her
responsibilities alone. She raised her three daughters and kept the family farm
going at the same time. She also managed to publish short stories, and she won
several awards for her work, including the Katherine Mansfield Prize in 1961,
Guggenheim Fellowships in 1959 and 1961, and an honorary doctorate in 1968.
Some of her stories written during this period, dealing with the topic of
widowhood, are her best stories.
She died in 1996 at the age of 84.
QUESTIONS
The smell of people: do you think people smell according their job? Have you read “The perfume”?
What do you know about Mary Magdalen? What is the irony in the story?
What are the Tiller Girls? And the Gaiety? What do you need to have to be a Tiller Girl?
What is the Seven Churches ritual? Is there something
similar here?
In the story they say nuns don’t cough or sneeze
because they are like angels. Here, when someone sneezes, we say “Jesus!”, or
“Health!”, or, in catholic anglophone countries, “Bless you”. But usually in
Great Britain, when somebody sneezes, he or she says “Sorry!” Do you know any
different habits about sneezing, or yawning or belching?
What do you need to be a waitress, according to the
story?
What kind of girl do the boys choose to get married to,
according to the story? Do you know other clichés?
What do you know about Mary Alacoque?
What preparations did the mother do for the nuns
visit? How did the neighbours help?
Our protagonist ties a knot in her handkerchief: What
do you do when you want to remember something?
What do you know about leprosy and lepers? Have you
seen the film “Sweet Bean”? And Papillon? What happened to Gaugin in the novel The
Moon and Sixpence, by Somerset Maugham?
What is a Recruiting Officer?
Describe the two nuns that visit the protagonist’s
house.
How did the meeting go?
On page 440, line 20, one of the nuns says: “Oh, we
have to be ready for all the eventualities”. What do you think she means?
What cab did the girl order for the nuns? Describe
cab, horse, cabby…
Tell us about the accident. Did the nuns get hurt?
At the end: is she going to be a nun? How do you know?
What is Dollymount?
PREPARE YOUR SPEECH
What do you know (from your experience) about nuns?
Did you study in a nun’s school? What do you think about your experience?
Tell us your experience about your call/vocation. Is
it easy to know one’s call? An important number of students change studies
after their first year: why is it so difficult to choose what one wants to be
in one’s life? What would you do if you didn’t like your child’s call?
What do you think of Missions or NGOs? Do they really
help the people they say they’re helping?
VOCABULARY
cut out, call, hopscotch, sniff,
cheapen, sparky, scrub, hold with, hot jar, kneeler, tightly, dead keen, morosely,
dowry, harp on one string, start the ball rolling, front, ram, lore, square
meal, lug, return room, being any the wiser, raffle, stub, back out of, gorgeous,
wear away, pickle, daft, flighty, cabby, bucket, caper