Holiday stories often conjure images of warmth, joy, and the unshakable hope of the season. Yet the ones that resonate most deeply with me embrace the complexities of the human spirit, where darkness and light coexist. Consider Ebenezer Scrooge's ghostly reckoning in A Christmas Carol or George Bailey's moment of despair in It’s a Wonderful Life. These tales endure because they confront the struggles that make acts of kindness and redemption meaningful.
Claire Keegan’s novella Small Things Like These joins this tradition, offering a quietly powerful story about compassion and moral courage. Set against an unassuming backdrop, it shines not through grand gestures but through the strength of one man’s resolve to bring light into the darkness around him.
Life for Bill Furlong has been a series of quiet struggles and modest triumphs. Raised by a single mother in a small Irish town steeped in Catholic tradition, Bill always felt like an outsider. His mother's untimely death when he was just twelve left him orphaned, compounding his sense of otherness. Yet, against the odds, Bill managed to build a life of stability.
Now a coal merchant, he earns enough to provide for his wife and their five daughters. While his work doesn’t bring wealth, it sustains them—a rare accomplishment in 1985 Ireland, where economic hardship drives many to seek better fortunes in London. Bill’s existence is humble but steady, shaped by resilience and an enduring sense of responsibility.
As Christmas approaches, the frigid weather brings a surge of business for Bill. Among his regular deliveries is the local convent, a place of wealth and power in the small town. During one of his visits, Bill stumbles upon a disturbing truth hidden within its walls. This discovery forces him to reckon with the ghosts of his own past and the silent complicity of a community tightly gripped by the church’s influence.
Claire Keegan masterfully transports readers to a bygone Ireland, juxtaposing the warmth and goodwill of the holiday season with the stark hypocrisy of those in power failing to live by the values they preach. Her writing is spare yet evocative, letting the story’s quiet profundity emerge naturally without becoming overwrought. The novella is timeless, feeling like a classic while addressing issues that remain strikingly relevant today.
At just over a hundred pages, Small Things Like These is a compact but profoundly moving tale. It captures the power of quiet resistance and the impact of small acts of courage, earning its place as a standout holiday tale and one of my most memorable reads of the year.
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(2024, 87)