Feeling a little under the weather recently, I searched my bookshelves for a “comfort read”. Something undemanding, entertaining, and diverting. I came across Vengeance by John Banville (when he was still using Benjamin Black as his pseudonym). An old train ticket from 2013 used as a bookmark implied I had read the novel before, though how I might have forgotten the brilliant and shocking opening chapter is something I don’t want to think about too much. It’s a satisfying yarn, set in Dublin in the 1950s and featuring Dr. Quirke, the lonely curmudgeon who is the city’s official pathologist. The suicide of a prominent businessman and the subsequent murder of his partner draw Quirke into the shenanigans of Dublin’s upper middle class, where infidelity, backstabbing, and disloyalty are de rigeur.
Banville’s mystery novels depend to some degree on the reader’s willingness to suspend disbelief. How does a pathologist get so much latitude to do detective work and never step inside the mortuary or perform a postmortem? No matter. Quirke is a wonderful creation and Banville an exceptionally gifted writer. Vengeance proved to be the pick-me-up I needed.
