Long Island by Colm Toibin

Twenty or so years have passed (since Brooklyn), and we find Eilis still married to Tony, with two lovely teenaged children, sharing a tiny cul-de-sac on Long Island with Tony’s parents and his brothers and their families. This excessive closeness might not be so terrible if it weren’t for the sudden, unexpected visitor that appears at Eilis’s door one day, bringing with him a threat that upends her entire life. With this startling news and its implications, Eilis gradually learns two things: one, that there are no secrets in Tony’s family ever, and two, that she has no true allies among them. As she realizes that she must take matters into her own hands, she slowly tries to plot how she will cope. How she manages and her next steps will change her life and the lives of her whole family.

In this installment of the series, we see Eilis finally taking a stand, finding her red line. She has matured and grown stronger, even as she is treated so poorly by the family around her, including her husband. They lie to her, disrespect her, and treat her as an outsider. She learns the hard way that she cannot trust any of them. But she perseveres, trying to maintain some degree of sanity in order to hold on to her status as the mother of her children, knowing that if she deserts them, she will lose them (that she has few rights in the eyes of the law, especially at that time). And that the family will double-cross her, even though she is the one who has been wronged. So she is stealthy, strategic, smart.

The plot is also more intriguing, taking us back to Ireland, winding us back in time, as her old flame is reignited. But it’s much more complicated now. Lives have moved on, relationships have formed and Eilis is walking into a web of complex emotional ties. How she balances her own desires with her children’s welfare and her family’s internal drama keeps the story moving and the reader engaged.

I definitely found this one to be more engaging and less frustrating. Worth the work!