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Hereafter

The Telling Life of Ellen O'Hara

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Winner of the 2024 Michel Déon Prize for Non-Fiction
A lyrical portrait of a young Irish woman reinventing herself at the turn of the twentieth century in America
Ellen O'Hara was a young immigrant from Ireland at the end of the nineteenth century who, with courage and resilience, made a life for herself in New York while financially supporting those at home. Hereafter is her story, told by Vona Groarke, her descendant, in a beautiful blend of poetry, prose, and history.
In July 1882, Ellen O'Hara stepped off a ship from the West of Ireland to begin a new life in New York. What she encountered was a world of casual racial prejudice that characterized her as ignorant, dirty, and feckless, the butt of many jokes. From the slim range of jobs available to her she, like, many of her kind, found a position as a domestic servant, working long hours and living in to save on rent and keep. After an unfortunate marriage, Ellen determined to win financial security on her own, and eventually opened a boarding house where her two children were able to rejoin her.
Vona Groarke builds this story from historical fact, drawing from various archives for evidence of Ellen. However, she also considers why lives such as Ellen's seem to leave such a light trace in such records and fills in the gaps with memory and empathetic projection. Ellen—scrappy, skeptical, and straight-talking—is the heroine of Hereafter, whose resilience animates the story and whose voice shines through with vivid clarity. Hereafter is both a compelling account of an incredible figure and a reflection on how one woman's story can speak for more than one life.

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    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2022
      An acclaimed Irish poet imagines a female ancestor's life through a unique blend of research and balladry. Groarke, who has published eight poetry collections, knew her great-grandmother Ellen O'Hara through the stories her mother told her. The author was intrigued, but it was only during a stay in New York many years later that she seriously began investigating Ellen's life through a combination of archival research and creative channeling. In order to tell the story, she writes, "I will need guardrail prose, but I will also need language that cross-stitches and embroiders itself, the way poetry often does." The result is a dual-voiced narrative inhabited by a feisty Ellen, who speaks in "the boxy fourteen-line rhyming form" of the folk sonnet, and a questing narrator who speaks in the thoughtful prose of a seeker. The choice to enshrine Ellen's voice in this way not only emphasizes the imaginative nature of Ellen's character, but also pays tribute to what Groarke envisions as her ancestor's traditional nature; it also transforms an otherwise ordinary life into something more consequential. To ground Ellen's life in history, Groarke interweaves excerpts from studies about Irish immigration and archival documents like baptism registers, passenger manifests, and newspaper clippings and photographs. The author mixes known details about Ellen's life--her work as a maid in New York; her marriage to a man who deserted her--with intuitive insights into Ellen's hopes and fears. Most of these involved the return of the children she sent back home along with lifesaving remittances to her relatives. She wanted only to build a life in America for her children, but in the process, she and other women like her helped build modern Ireland. As it imagines one woman's life, this genre-bending book probes the nature of family and belonging and the profound ways ordinary immigrant women changed history on both sides of the Atlantic. Intelligent, searching, and warmly rendered.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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