A historical novel focuses on an Irish immigrant family’s fragile and combustible American dream.
In Flower’s tale, Irish farmer Robert Gillian loses his two youngest children during the blight in Ireland and starts afresh in New York City. A scene depicting his family’s suffering during the Irish famine cuts to his imprisonment in a New York jailhouse in 1869. The book unravels the threads leading up to Gillian’s grim fate, showing the dangerous lengths he goes to as the protector and provider of his family. Gillian becomes a fireman for “White Flag” Engine Company Five, making friends with the recently freed African American Clancy and the Native American Katonah. Gillian’s drunk and complacent foreman, Brian Denny, appears wealthy despite the poor status of the company. Gillian is haunted by a strange figure with a terrifically scarred visage, “a man and bug at once!”—John Mahon. Through Denny and Mahon, Gillian eventually becomes a “fire marker man,” putting down plaques for the Chelsea Surety Company at its insured buildings—while also carrying out more sinister activities for the business. His wife, Aileen, and daughter, Mary, tackle the difficulties of working at an exhausting textile company, while his son, Patrick, fends off bullies and learns to become a druggist. Gillian gets wrapped up in the complexities of arson, firefighting, the Civil War, and individual quests for revenge. A powerful family narrative of tragedy and hope emerges in Flower’s novel along with the age-old American question: How can the exploited pull themselves up from their bootstraps without exploiting others? When Gillian becomes wealthy enough to buy a mirror, he is forced to look at himself and question his own authenticity and moral convictions. Despite occasional obscurities regarding 1800s fire safety systems in the United States, the novel weaves an engaging story with strong characterizations. The book’s absorbing themes—questions of justice and morality in building wealth—are pressingly relevant today.
An engrossing family tale that balances poignant reflections with 19th-century action.