Pilgrimage

John Broderick, Colm Tóibín

Book cover for Pilgrimage
Book cover for Pilgrimage

Pilgrimage

Pilgrimage

John Broderick, Colm Tóibín

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Description

'She felt like a woman imprisoned in a luxurious room; to whom visitors are admitted; whose life goes on very much as it has always done; but who is conscious that if she lifted the thick carpet she would gaze down into a pit of wild beasts.' Julia Glynn is the very model of a 'prim and well-conducted' bourgeois Catholic wife, a regular Mass-goer and president of her local charitable society. Her crippled husband, Michael, is the richest man in town, held in awe by bankers and bishops alike. In his illness he is dutifully tended to by the household manservant, Stephen Lydon, and by his handsome young nephew, Doctor Jim. As Michael's condition worsens, their friend Father Victor proposes a pilgrimage to Lourdes. When Julia begins receiving a series of obscene anonymous letters detailing her sexual infidelities with Jim, her suspicions fall on the 'sinister' Stephen, who both attracts and repels her. As the day of departure to Lourdes approaches, the heart of an Irish small town 'as watchful as the jungle' is laid bare, its inhabitants stripped of their 'respectable clothes' to reveal an 'elemental sensuality'. The Pilgrimage's depiction of sexual need in 1950s Ireland led to its banning by the Censorship Board in 1961. Retitled The Chameleons in 1965, it sold over 100,000 copies in America. This reissue restores Broderick to his rightful place alongside McGahern, O'Brien and O'Faolain, taking a new generation of readers on a unique 'pilgrimage of the body'. A preface to the French edition by Julien Green is here translated for the first time.

Critical Reviews

"Had The Pilgrimage been freely available in 1961 . . . [it] would have filled a silence about homosexuality that was almost total . . . What Broderick is attempting is a French novel set in an Irish town; he wishes to put dangerous liaisons into the Irish midlands, to allow his Irish characters the freedom to pray to God for their eternal souls and then get into a state of mortal sin with agility and ease."

--Colm Tóibín, Arts Council of Ireland Laureate Blog


"A masterly piece of work . . . Ironic, sarcastic like Swift and Shaw, sentimental like The Playboy of the Western World . . . [Broderick] wrote with great simplicity, his pitiless eye stripping his characters bare and then letting the story clothe them."

--Julien Green


"A taut stylish book that surely read like an incendiary device at the time . . . Broderick's tightly controlled style is awash with the sharp humour of recognition. He exposes Catholicism but has no need to mock it. People go through empty rituals of observance and lead utterly secular and selfish lives, but it doesn't mean God isn't watching. With The Pilgrimage, Athlone found its Balzac . . . a man unafraid to confront taboos at a time when others felt it wiser to keep their heads down."

--Dermot Bolger, The Sunday Independent (Dublin)


"The Athlone writer John Broderick is never celebrated in Ireland to the extent that his literary talents deserve . . . [his] first novel, The Pilgrimage, published in 1961, was promptly banned by the Censorship of Publications Board . . . Whatever the reason, the novel certainly seems to have struck a dissonant chord. Its publication came one year after Edna O'Brien's The Country Girls and four years before John McGahern's The Dark suffered a similar fate . . . These novels presented a dangerous cocktail of promiscuity, burgeoning female sexuality and masturbation that elements within Irish society were not prepared to face up to in the 1960s."

--Eamon Maher, The Irish Times


"A fugitive from a superior civilization, struggling to survive in a meretricious wasteland . . . [Broderick's] savage satire conceals the frustration and anguish of a disillusioned romantic."

--Patrick Murray, Éire-Ireland


"A Belfast reviewer called John Broderick's [The Pilgrimage] 'the most accurately-observed Irish novel I have read in years.' Perhaps it is worth adding that his books are banned in the Free State of Eire, where he was born. With such credentials as these, an American reviewer must accept the sting of Broderick's picture, and can only conclude that Ireland is still . . . the most distressful country the world has ever seen--and the least changed, for all her apparent political alterations."

--William A. P. White, The New York Times


"[Broderick's] osmotic sense of his country has made his writing barometric and few have written so well about the Town, that oddly Irish settlement in which nearly half our people live. By 'barometric' I mean that one could take a reading from his novels of the state of the country, the real but hidden forces at work . . . The Pilgrimage [is] about public piety and the dark secrets concealed by the peaceful facades of houses in respectable towns in good Catholic Ireland."

--Sean McMahon, The Irish Independent

Publishing Information

Publisher: McNally Editions
Pub date: 2025-03-04
Length: 224 pages

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