In The Forgotten Secret by Kathleen McGurl, Clare Farrell is approaching her 50th birthday.
For half of her life she has been married to a narcissistic man who has
systematically cut her off from everything and everyone that did not center
around him. So when Clare inherits her uncle’s home in Ireland along with a
monetary inheritance, she decides to take the leap and separate from her
husband and begin life anew. The house holds secrets, including a stash of guns
and weapons under a floor in the barn and a birth certificate and communion
medallion from two separate people tucked away in the stuffing of an old
armchair.
Watch the video below or skip beneath it for the rest of the book review.
I rooted for Clare. I cheered for her, cried with her and
laughed with her. Breaking away would not be easy and she encounters events
such as wrecking her automobile on an Irish country road to renovating a
centuries-old home that has fallen into disrepair. But she makes friends in the
nearby village and she exhibits a lot of grit, determination and courage.
In between Clare’s chapters, we learn of a woman connected
to the house a century earlier during the Irish War for Independence. Ellen
O’Brien lives with her crotchety father in a modest home but she’s dating Jimmy
Gallagher, a young man she’s known an entire lifetime. They were best friends
in school and now they’ve become lovers as well as clandestine members of the
Irish underground volunteers fighting for independence from Great Britain. It
is Jimmy who grew up in the house that Clare inherits and it’s both Jimmy’s
story and Ellen’s that rolls out through the book.
The author, Kathleen McGurl, describes the countryside so
well that I could see the village in my mind’s eye, both as it was in 1920 as
well as present day. I came to respect the danger that Ellen, Jimmy and others
willingly undertook to fight for their cause—a cause that would cost some their
lives. And when Ellen discovers she is pregnant yet she is still unmarried, I
felt her anguish at being sent to one of the Magdalene Laundries, a convent for
unwed mothers and their babies that turned into an unsaintly prison.
We also see the contrasts in what women could accomplish
within a brief hundred years—at Ellen’s dependency on her father and the
kindness of strangers to Clare’s struggle for independence.
Like all of McGurl’s books, there are multiple threads that
seem unrelated but all blend together into a seamless mosaic of love and war,
endings and new beginnings. I highly recommend The Forgotten Secret by Kathleen McGurl.