[
Originally posted at New York Journal of Books]
“What neither
can say aloud is, Strafford failed to save Quirke’s wife in a shooting the year
before, and there’s no forgiveness on the table.”
Crime may be impulsive, launched by a forgotten set
of car keys dangling from a sports car’s ignition or an easily hacked online
account. On the other hand, it can root deep in the history of grievance,
violence, prejudice, and war—which makes a far more complex narrative and is,
of course, how John Banville situates The
Lock-Up. War and its profits, going back to an escape from
Germany during the Second World War, mean an excuse for a twisted soul to take
revenge via markets and manipulation.
The death of youthful historian Rosa Jacobs, found
murdered in her car in Dublin, provides the entryway for investigating both the
“not yet past” past and today’s market rewards. It will take dedicated research
(and a bit of provocation) to untangle the threads of motive for this crime,
and in the process, two of Banville’s noted characters of previous novels,
Detective Inspector St John Strafford and police pathologist Quirke, collude.
This isn’t new to Banville’s work—the pair, originally introduced in separate
books to probe different Irish issues, appeared together in April in Spain (2021)—but because each is enduring a
personal crisis, their conversations cut deeper this time around.
For instance, Quirke (gulping whiskey, of course)
abruptly offers an awful description of an autopsy on a child, to which
Strafford struggles to make a sympathetic response. Quirke next asks Strafford,
“What was your first death?” Strafford takes the question as meant, and briefly
tells of shooting an IRA man who’d pointed a tommy gun at him. And what neither
can say aloud is, Strafford failed to save Quirke’s wife in a shooting the year
before, and there’s no forgiveness on the table.
“Do you dream about him, the IRA man?” Quirke
asked.
“No. Do you? Dream about the child?”
“I remember him, that’s all … All that, and the
plume of steam coming off the child’s brain.”
The novel won’t get much more graphic than that,
although the clumsy dance of intimacy between these two aging men continues
painfully throughout. As is the case for the Troubles that background the book,
and the Second World War yet further back, there seems to be no calm resolution
for the long-term effects of trauma when nurtured today.
Still, with Banville’s Irish home terrain in mind,
it’s startling as the action begins to tilt toward distant Israel. Perhaps the
ongoing presence of war and violence there provides an apt counter to the
fumbled efforts to make peace in Ireland. Or between Quirke and Strafford, a
matter that becomes increasingly urgent as the walls separating their private
lives are pierced. Loneliness followed by attraction may force the stones of
resentment to move, like water that’s been frozen, then thaws, leaving gaps
where it’s been.
For some years, Banville separated his literary
fiction from his genre work in crime by using the pen name Benjamin Black for
the genre books. But The Lock-Up comes out under his own name, and stitches together the two forms of
narrative, the way Quirke and Strafford also become painfully connected. The
death of Rosa Jacobs? Yes, of course, the investigation brings a solution, even
resolution.
But what about the pain of Ireland and its
besetting illnesses, alcohol abuse and divisive religion?
“We know a great deal,” Strafford lied. “We have
all the pieces, we just need to put them together. You can help us.”
“Why should I?” one likely murderer replies to him. Which is, when you think
about it, a very sensible response, one that pierces the walls of genre and
makes reading this crime novel a haunting and memorable experience.
PS: Looking for more mystery reviews, from cozy to very dark? Browse the Kingdom Books mysteries review blog here.