My Coney Island Baby: A Novel
My Coney Island Baby: A Novel book cover

My Coney Island Baby: A Novel

Hardcover – April 9, 2019

Price
$11.33
Format
Hardcover
Pages
256
Publisher
Harper
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0062856562
Dimensions
6 x 0.89 x 9 inches
Weight
15.6 ounces

Description

“An illicit meeting between long-term lovers makes for a poignant, piercing meditation on middle age and the passing of time…In the closing pages, O’Callaghan’s prose reaches a pitch of emotional intensity that ensures these characters will linger with you long after the book is closed.” — The Guardian “This is not an epic novel. There are no heroes. It is the story of two ordinary people trapped in their ordinary lives. But in the hands of O’Callaghan it is magnified to the truly extraordinary. A great tragedy. I long thought Anita Brookner the high priestess when it comes to telling the tales of loneliness and defeat. But she’s now got company.” — Sunday Independent “Evoking William Trevor and Colm Toibin…This book is a quiet a taboo-breaker…In simple but elegant language, O’Callaghan presents an intricate look inside a relationship ― and the moment when it all is about to change… Yes, they’re adulterers and betrayers of those they’ve sworn to love, but from a novelistic point of view that only adds to the drama and tragedy of their lives ― beautifully expressed by this fine chronicler of inner worlds.” — Irish Examiner USA “Compellingly readable…An impressive work…Through one day in a years long extramarital affair, an Irish writer looks at intimacy and estrangement… The prose [is] exceptional, elegiac and eloquent, in conveying insight and sympathy for the small cast’s two main players as they face an uncertain future… ” — Kirkus Reviews ( starred review) “An attentive portraitist, [O’Callaghan] writes beautifully, and at length, about gestures, glances and other fleeting moments… A small story told at close range, My Coney Island Baby is suffused with great, painful beauty.” — Minneapolis Star-Tribune “I know of no writer on either side of the Atlantic who is better at exploring the human spirit under assault than Billy O’Callaghan.” — Robert Olen Butler “…a welcome voice to the pantheon of new Irish writing“ — Edna O’Brien “An illicit meeting between long-term lovers makes for a poignant, piercing meditation on middle age and the passing of time…In the closing pages, O’Callaghan’s prose reaches a pitch of emotional intensity that ensures these characters will linger with you long after the book is closed.” — Happy Ever After blog, USA Today “Vividly rendered… O’Callaghan excels at painting a portrait of physical and emotional isolation.” — Publishers Weekly “O’Callaghan [has made a] significant achievement in this fine novel… Good books remind us of other good books and in its treatment of adultery this one calls to mind thematic ancestors such as Madame Bovary , Anna Karenina and The Scarlet Letter .” — Sunday Times “Quiet, subtle and deeply moving … This is a fine novel, with elegance and wisdom lying beneath an unpretensious surface and O’Callaghan, a gifted writer, has managed to do that most difficult of things: take a quiet, almost everyday story and transform it into a thing of beauty.” — John Boyne, Irish Times “Axa0poignant, piercingxa0meditation on middle age and the passing of time…xa0these characters will linger with you long after the book is closed.” — Charles Kilroy, The Guardian “With poeticism and aching sensitivity, O’Callaghan unknots the minute workings of these starved adulterous souls … images rendered here stick with you, such is the intensity that they shimmer with.” — Irish Independent “Billy O’Callaghan’s writing is a profound, uncommon blend of grit and beauty, with sentences that, like his characters, are simultaneously sparse and infinitely rich.” — Simon Van Booy “ My Coney Island Baby , a second novel by the accomplished short-story writer Billy O'Callaghan, offers an amicable and committed picture of heartbreak.” — Telegraph “In some ways [the] book reads a little bit like a modern-day Lady Chatterley’s Lover , with the lovers making their way to rendezvous at Coney Island rather than in a gamekeeper’s hut...Overall, there is much to savor in the book.” — Tablet On a bitterly cold winter afternoon, Michael and Caitlin, two middle-aged lovers, escape their unhappy marriages to keep an illicit date. Once a month for the past quarter of a century, Coney Island has been their haven: the place in which they have abandoned themselves to their love. These beautiful, carefully rationed days have long sustained Michael and Caitlin’s love, and have helped them survive the tedium of their lives when separate from each other. But now, amid the howling winds whipping off the Atlantic and a snowstorm blackening the horizon, this nearly abandoned resort feels like the edge of the world. On this winter day, burrowed in their private cocoon, they will discover that their lives are on the brink of change. Michael’s wife is battling cancer, and Caitlin’s husband is about to receive a major promotion that will involve relocating to the Midwest. After half a lifetime together in their most intimate moments, certain long-denied facts must now be faced, decisions made, consequences weighed, and maybe, just maybe, chances finally taken. A quiet, intense depiction of love and intimacy, My Coney Island Baby reveals, within the course of a single day’s passing, the histories, landscapes, tragedies, and occasional moments of wonder that constitute the lives of two people who, although living worlds apart, have been inexorably drawn together. But even in this most private of retreats, a place seemingly built for romance, the most heartbreaking of realities looms. Billy O'Callaghan was born in Cork in 1974, and is the author of three short story collections: In Exile and In Too Deep (2008 and 2009 respectively, both published by Mercier Press), and The Things We Lose, The Things We Leave Behind' (2013, published by New Island Books), which was honoured with a Bord Gais Energy Irish Book Award and which has been selected as Cork's "One City, One Book" for 2017. His first novel, really a ghost story entitled The Dead House , wasxa0published byxa0a small Irish press (Brandon Books/O'Brien Press) in May 2017, andxa0will be publishedxa0in the U.S. by Arcade inxa0May 2018. A recipient of the 2013 Bord Gais Energy Irish Book Award for Short Story of the Year, and a 2010 Arts Council of Ireland Bursary Award for Literature, his story, "The Boatman" was recently shortlisted for the 2016 Costa Short Story Award. He has won and been shortlisted for numerous other honours, including the George A. Birmingham Award, the Lunch Hour Stories Prize, the Molly Keane Creative Writing Award, the Sean O'Faolain Award, the RTE Radio 1 Francis MacManus Award, the Faulkner/Wisdom Award, the Glimmer Train Prize and the Writing Spirit Award. He was also short-listed four times for the RTE Radio 1 P.J. O'Connor Award for Drama. He also served as the 2016 Writer-in-Residence for the Cork County Libraries. http://billyocallaghan.ie/en/ Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “An illicit meeting between long-term lovers makes for a poignant, piercing meditation on middle age and the passing of time…In the closing pages, O’Callaghan’s prose reaches a pitch of emotional intensity that ensures these characters will linger with you long after the book is closed.” —
  • The Guardian
  • Radiant with beauty, longing, and desire, and deeply touching, this riveting novel, reminiscent of the works of William Trevor and Colm Tóibín, evokes the long love affair between a man and a woman, each married to another, who meet every month in a decaying hotel in Coney Island, Brooklyn.
  • On a bitterly cold winter’s afternoon, Michael and Caitlin, two middle-aged lovers, escape their unhappy marriages to keep an illicit date. Once a month for the past quarter of a century, Coney Island has been their haven, the place in which they have abandoned themselves to their love.
  • These beautiful, carefully-rationed days have long sustained Michael and Caitlin’s love, and have helped help them survive the tedium of their lives separate from each other. But now, amid the howling winds whipping off the Atlantic, and a snow storm blackening the horizon, this nearly abandoned resort feels like the edge of the world. On this winter day, burrowed in their private cocoon, they will discover that their lives are on the brink of change.
  • Michael’s wife is battling cancer, and Caitlin’s husband is about to receive a major promotion, which will involve relocating to the Midwest. After half a lifetime together in their most intimate moments, certain long-denied facts must be faced, decisions made, consequences weighed and, maybe, just maybe, chances finally taken.
  • A quiet, intense depiction of love and intimacy,
  • My Coney Island Baby
  • reveals, within the course of a single day’s passing, the histories, landscapes, tragedies and occasional moments of wonder that constitute the lives of two people who, although living worlds apart, have been inexorably drawn together. But even in this most private of retreats, a place seemingly built for romance, the most heartbreaking of realities loom.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(63)
★★★★
20%
(42)
★★★
15%
(32)
★★
7%
(15)
28%
(59)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Tedious

I have already posted a review but since asked, I will reiterate. This was sad. I mean sad in the sense that it did not hold my attention one bit. The male is committing a long term adultery and his wife has cancer. Right there is where I am stopped. No one should be writing a story that alludes to that. It does not gain the positive feel from women across the globe. Affairs are dangerous things. And someone always is hurt. Let's not hurt someone waiting on death.
15 people found this helpful
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Yes, Adulterers!

There is a one-star review here on Amazon of this book titled simply "Adulterers." The reviewer briefly criticizes the life choices of the two main characters, concluding "Made me sick." I laughed at this review when I read it and I am laughing now. But ruefully, for "Amy Green" has a point, even if it is muddy thinking to hate a book because you hate its characters.

This is a beautifully written and deeply sad story about...adulterers. Caitlin and Michael met in their 20s, when they were each already married to the wrong person, and have had monthly assignations ever since, somewhere north of 20 years. Neither couple has children (Michael and his wife lost a baby early in their marriage, pre-Caitlin, and this tragedy is presented as one of the things that drove them apart, while Caitlin never seems to have even considered children, unless I missed it). The affair is and the most important thing in their lives, yet they've never had the guts to leave their spouses and be together. Why? Amy Green asks, and it's not a terrible question. But I personally think the story tells us why, even if not in so many words.

There is something so deeply Irish about this book, and not just the way it reminds me of the missed connections and repressed longings of many of the characters in Dubliners, or Eilis in Colm Toibin's Brooklyn, sleepwalking through her life. Michael and Caitlin drift through their own lives and ignore their own feelings, because, I think, at bottom they feel they don't deserve any more than what little they have, and they fear losing even that. Early trauma? Lack of love? Who knows. It is what it is. In their loss aversion, they have finally lost everything, let their own lives get away from them. Also, been really selfish and shitty and emotionally unavailable to their spouses, who could have had a chance to start over with someone who actually liked them, who was honest
9 people found this helpful
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Winter Rendezvous

Two middle-aged lovers brave the deserted, wintry boardwalk of Coney Island. The wind is howling. A snowstorm has been forecast. Michael and Caitlin walk hand in hand to a seedy hotel for their once monthly day of emotional and physical sharing. They have done so for twenty-five years. It started with a chance meeting at a bar. Michael was reeling from the death of his fourteen week old son. His wife, Barbara was "entrenched" in a state of isolation while Michael worked two jobs trying not to "feel". Caitlin thought that her husband, Thomas considered her to be "...another bullet point on a long list, and never a priority". Both Michael and Caitlin got married in their twenties but found, what was seemingly true love, outside of marriage.

"It is almost possible to believe that the world has been made to exist entirely for their benefit, and that nothing else matters beyond their happiness". For twenty-five years, Michael and Caitlin have cherished their "couple time", sharing their most intimate memories, hopes and dreams. In Coney Island, they are far from hearth and home. They can stand gazing at the Atlantic Ocean but Barbara, a "ghostly presence...has existed along the periphery". Thomas has as well. As for Michael and Caitlin, "Time makes us afraid...we pick up so many anchors along the way". What does the future hold in store for them?

Michael and Caitlin seemed very much in love. In their twenties, their clandestine trysts were risk taking ventures. Now, well into his forties, "He watches her...and, feels himself falling for her all over again". On Caitlin's part, his now overweight frame is of no consequence. She "...savours the details of who he is..."

"My Coney Island Baby" by Billy O'Callaghan is a sensitive portrayal of middle-aged love. Michael and Caitlin were flawed individuals who accepted each other's imperfections. They were imprisoned in their marriages but arguably prisoners within the confines of their hotel room. They never had a chance to fly.

Thank you HarperCollins Publishers and Net Galley for the opportunity to read and review "My Coney Island Baby".
8 people found this helpful
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Adulterers

Poor babies. "My wife/husband doesn't love me the way I think they should".

Adultery, pure and simple. If they would have put into their marriages what was so wonderful in their liasons, maybe things would have been different. If not, divorce. No children involved, easy peasy. Made me sick.
4 people found this helpful
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Love it!

I love every line in this sonorous book. Billy O'Callaghan is an exceptional writer with an uncanny aptitude for describing the hidden nuances of the human heart and psyche. This gorgeous novel, set in one day, tells the story of lovers who have met in secret, monthly, for years, as they are married to others. It is masterfully crafted and will sweep you away, as has everything I've read by this incomparable writer. I recommend this novel!
3 people found this helpful
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Love at a crossroads

My grandmother lived near Coney Island and when I was a child, I was always a bit in awe of its magic and enchantment, always undercut by a prevailing sense of menace an a hint of unreality.

In Billy O’Callaghan’s novel, his merging of marvel with a seedy underbelly is on display in this tale of illicit love. Michael and Caitlin, two lovers in their late 40s, escape their tedious marriages to revel in each other on a monthly basis. Michael, a fastidious salesman, experienced tragedy early in his marriage; Caitlin, a writer, subsists with a seemingly good husband who may have had his dalliances. These regular trysts are what keeps them going.

The author is a master wordsmith and in dissecting the several hours that Michael and Caitlin share on a cold January afternoon, we get a clear sense of their interactions—their aging bodies, their “survival fueled on denial and made bearable by meeting once a month to pleasure in lighting one another’s fuses, that four week integer tried and tested to perfection in their game of lust gap enough to hone the appetite to aching, to hold excitement at a dizzying height.”

The descriptions of the repeated physical connections—at first luminous—begin to feel repetitive and I suspect deliberately so. The acceptance of the aging process (Michael now carries an excess of weight and his stomach pummels her during lovemaking) is objectively displayed. These are two people who know each other’s imperfections and provide a safe haven. But like any affair, theirs is now at a crossroads, due to external factors on each of their sides. A question looms through this book: what do they have a right to choose?

As decisions loom, time is slowed down and each detail becomes intensely described, which is one of the beauties of Billy O’Callaghan’s writing. Although the author refuses to judge his characters, the reader may see differently. “Love…is the story we make up to justify all the rotten things we do,” Caitlin says. Is that, indeed, the definition of love? Or is it the inertia and lack of courage that keeps them tied to dying marriages? There is, of course, no clear answer.
1 people found this helpful
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Relationships are complex

Gorgeous writing....
A wonderful story!!!
1 people found this helpful