Circle of Friends (novel) explained

Circle of Friends
Author:Maeve Binchy
Language:English
Country:Dublin, Ireland
Genre:Drama
Isbn:978-0-385-34173-8
English Pub Date:1990
Media Type:Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Circle of Friends is a 1990 novel by the Irish author Maeve Binchy. Set in Dublin, as well as in the fictitious town of Knockglen in rural Ireland during the 1950s, the story centres on a group of university students. The novel was adapted into a 1995 feature film directed by Pat O'Connor.

Synopsis

In the fictional small Irish town of Knockglen in 1950, an unlikely friendship blossoms between ten-year-old Bernadette 'Benny' Hogan – an overweight, big-hearted, only child of a local merchant – and wiry orphan Eve Malone, raised from birth by nuns in a Catholic convent after her late mother's upper-class Protestant family rejected her.[1] The friendship endures into their teens, as they both attend University College Dublin. There their loyalty to each other is tested by the introduction of more students to their circle, including rugby player Jack Foley and the beautiful and ambitious social climber, Nan Mahon.[2] Benny surprises everyone by winning the heart of the handsome Jack, but things turn sour when Nan attempts to use Eve's family connections to her own advantage. When her plan to snare Eve's wealthy cousin Simon Westward goes awry, Nan is forced into a new plan, one which will break Benny's heart.[3]

A key subplot involves the future of the Hogan family business, Hogan's Gentlemen's Outfitters, thrown into turmoil when Benny's father dies suddenly. Forced to abandon his plan to marry into the business, the efficient but unpleasant Sean Walsh demands a partnership, but Eddie Hogan dies before the agreement is signed. Benny reluctantly plans to honour the agreement; however, when she looks more closely at the business accounts, it reveals Sean may not be the model employee he seems.

Development

Binchy drew from her own experience at University College Dublin for characterization and plot. Like Benny, Binchy had been overweight and clueless about boyfriends upon her arrival at UCD. She too had to return to her parents' home each night rather than stay on campus. As in her experience, campus social life revolved around the student lounge called the Annexe. There Binchy discovered that talking with boys was not as fearful as she had thought, and conveys that experience in her depiction of Benny and Jack becoming friends.[4]

Themes

Among the themes the novel explores are happiness, friendship and love, commerce, and small-town Irish mores. Los Angeles Times reviewer Carolyn See describes:

Is "love" what life is about? Is marriage the cat's meow? Forget what women want—do men even want it? What if people got together for fun instead of love? What if friendship were the highest of all values? ... This is a madly subversive book. It purports to answer such harmless questions as: "What shall I wear?" but is, in fact, an almost perfect handbook on: "How shall I live?"[2]

Binchy similarly counterpoints the commercial aspirations of long-time merchants in the town against the newfangled ideas of two young entrepreneurs.[2] And she pokes fun at Irish small-town life with many vignettes of townspeople "playing telephone", recording their disparate reactions to what is going on around them.[1]

Reception

Circle of Friends was one of Binchy's most popular novels,[5] and one for which she was best known in the United States.[6] Reviewers commended it for its storytelling quality and description of ordinary events with "extraordinary straightforwardness and insight".[7] Publishers Weekly cited the book's "seductive readability".[3] Susan Isaacs in her review for The New York Times concluded: "There is nothing fancy about 'Circle of Friends.' There is no torrid sex, no profound philosophy. There are no stunning metaphors. There is just a wonderfully absorbing story about people worth caring about."[7]

Adaptations

Binchy's cousin, the actress Kate Binchy, narrated an audiobook of the novel in 1991.[8]

A 1995 feature film adaptation was written by Andrew Davies and directed by Pat O'Connor.[9] Binchy attended the Irish premiere at the Savoy Cinema.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kirkus Review. May 20, 2010. October 14, 2019. Kirkus Reviews.
  2. Web site: BOOK REVIEW : Subversive Lessons in a 'Circle of Friends'. Carolyn. See. Carolyn See. January 14, 1991. October 14, 2019. Los Angeles Times.
  3. Web site: Circle Of Friends. December 1, 1990. October 14, 2019. Publishers Weekly.
  4. Web site: A circle of friends and unreliable men. Piers. Dudgeon. July 29, 2013. October 14, 2019. The Independent.
  5. Web site: Maeve Binchy obituary. Conor. O'Clery. July 31, 2012. October 14, 2019. The Guardian.
  6. Web site: Circle Of Friends Author Maeve Binchy Dies At 72. Kelly. West. CinemaBlend. October 14, 2019.
  7. Web site: Three Little Girls From School. Susan. Isaacs. Susan Isaacs. December 30, 1990. October 14, 2019. The New York Times.
  8. Web site: Circle of friends / Maeve Binchy; read by Kate Binchy. 2018. October 14, 2019. National Library of Australia.
  9. Web site: 'Circle of Friends'. Desson. Howe. March 24, 1995. October 14, 2019. The Washington Post.
  10. Web site: The Times We Lived In: Maeve Binchy and her circle of friends. May 11, 1995. October 14, 2019. Irish Times.