| A Review of: Some Great Thing by W. P. KinsellaSome Great Thing is an ambitious novel. Two men live parallel lives
until they eventually intersect. Jerry McGuinty is a working class
young man with grand dreams and the smarts to bring them to fruition.
It is the 1970s and Ottawa is experiencing a building boom, and
Jerry becomes successful and wealthy by building quality houses.
His difficulties stem from meeting and marrying a spirited Irish
caterer named Kathleen Herlihy, who proves to be rancorous and even
at a young age has an inordinate thirst for whiskey. They have a
son, Jerry Jr., and the final third of the book is Jerry Sr. trying
to reconnect with Jerry Jr. who has taken to the streets at 14 after
years of mistreatment by his alcoholic mother, something that Jerry
Sr. tended to overlook while he was building his empire. The second
man is Simon Struthers. He is from old money, a career civil
servant, a small time lothario, corrupt, smarmy, a voyeur and a
stalker. But this is Jerry McGuinty's book and Simon is totally
unlikable and consequently his romantic and business intrigues are
not very interesting. Simon finds himself in a position of power,
controlling land primed for development, and after stringing Jerry
along for years, creates a project he hopes will be his legacy while
damaging Jerry financially. The novel is for the most part successful
because of the strong portrayals of Jerry Sr. and Kathleen, although
the Hemingway-like dialogue, running for pages without identifying
the speaker, is occasionally confusing, and the whole book could
have been edited down by at least 50 pages. Still, it is an excellent
first effort from a very promising writer.
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