(10/24/2020)
The Big Girl is Majella O'Neil, and the Small Town is Aghybogey, on the Irish border, where the Troubles are in the past but there is still plenty of tension. Majella lives with, and takes care of, her alcoholic mother, and she works in the town Fish and Chip Shop, the chipper. A lot of action takes place in the chipper, we learn about the town inhabitants though their transactions over the counter, who always eats what and their jokes, and who is doing what to who around town. She is good at her job, and being a clean freak, keeps the place sparkling. Her life has been defined by three tragedies: the death of her uncle in an explosion; the consequent disappearance of her adored father; finally the horrible death of her beloved grandmother, attached by thugs at home in her caravan. Majella's life is mundane, depressing, and grim. In her room she watches reruns of Dallas, her favorite show, over and over, absorbing life lessons from the lead characters. Those readers who are fastidious about language and bodily functions may cringe a bit here and there, maybe a lot. In spite of this the book is hilarious and funny, it is entertaining, original, dark. The phonetic depiction of the local dialect is dead on, though the list of Irish slang words promised in the retail edition will help with the translations.
Majella gets an unexpected life altering surprise when she inherits the family farm, left to her in Grandma's will. Now she has status, she sees a light at the end of her tunnel, she will go for it.