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Reviews for The Tragic Muse

 The Tragic Muse magazine reviews

The average rating for The Tragic Muse based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2011-05-21 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 4 stars Gregory T Becker
A delightful bookclub re-read. I am not a fan of love stories, but Ghost light by Joseph O' Connor (Author of Star of the Sea) is wonderfully imagined and a lovely social and political history of Ireland to boot. Joseph O' Connor imagines the relationship between actress Molly Allgood (Playboy of the Western World) and playwright John Synge. It was an affair that broken taboos as he was a protestant in his mid thirties and of higher social class and she a catholic, just turned 18 and from a Dublin working class family. We are introduced to Molly in London in her latter years, where she remember times past, the good old days at the Abbey Theatre with the Genius John Synge and the days when the " Playboy of the Western World" was scandalizing the land of Saints and Scholars. I really enjoyed this book, as the authors writing is vivid and lyrical. The characters are memorable and while most of the story is fiction, it does comes across as very believable and entertaining. This wasn't an easy read as I found myself sometimes having to re-read paragraphs but this may be more to do with my lack of concentration than the actual writing or story. It's a character driven novel that has wit and charm to it. There is an authors note which explains what is real and what is fiction. Another book that I enjoy having on my real life bookshelf.
Review # 2 was written on 2019-03-11 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 4 stars Mark Groubert
At the end of life what do we single out and hold up as our finest achievement? For Molly Allgood, an Irish actress, it's her relationship with the playwright John Synge. Ghost Light is narrated, often in the second person, by Molly during a single day at the end of her life. Molly is down on her luck and something of an alcoholic. Therefore, not perhaps the most reliable of narrators. Prone to flights of lyrical beautification, Molly, one suspects, has idealised Synge. What we learn about him, between the lines, isn't always likeable. He's reluctant for example to make their relationship public. This isn't one of those explosive soul-searing literary couplings. Molly and Singe's relationship is perhaps, behind all Molly's poetic waxing, a rather lacklustre affair, only made legendary in her mind by his early death. Yet it's this relationship she calls upon as her last will and testament. I have to confess at times I wasn't quite sure I believed this premise. There was a suspicion that this is a female sensibility interpreted (and distorted) through the lens of a male. Molly has been a successful actress yet dwells little on her professional achievements. Nor does she appear to have made any close friends or been bewitched by places she's visited. Obviously the author wanted to write about her brief relationship with Synge but perhaps the form he chose wasn't the best option. I'm pretty sure at the end of my life I won't be editing my life down to one person I briefly loved and devoting all my energy to recreating our story. I often found Molly more compelling as an old woman than a young girl. Joseph O'Connor writes very well - another lyrical Irishman - and though it went a bit flat towards the end there was still lots to admire in this novel.


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