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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Entertainment
Laurie Hertzel

Review: 'Listening Still,' by Anne Griffin

Don't Miss: What happens in a life when you are afraid to make choices that might hurt those who count on you.

"Listening Still" by Anne Griffin; St. Martin's Press (345 pages, $27.99)

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Jeanie's father can hear the final thoughts of the dead. This gift makes him the most sought-after undertaker in their Irish town of Kilcross — he relays messages to the bereaved, reassures the recently passed and sometimes keeps their confessions, almost like a priest.

It's clear at an early age that Jeanie has inherited his gift. She's drawing pictures in the embalming room one afternoon and looks up to chirp that "the lady" wants other music played.

Nobody questions this; Listening to the dead is a gift that runs in her family. But as the book opens it's clear that this gift is about to cement the course of Jeanie's future, whether she wants it to or not.

Her parents are retiring early and moving away, and they are leaving the mortuary to Jeanie and her embalmer husband, Niall. This sends Jeanie into a panic — did she ever actually decide this is what she wanted to do? To stay in the village where she grew up and take over the business? Hadn't she as a young woman fallen in love with globe-trotting photographer Fionn and dreamed of fleeing to London with him?

But instead, the burden of her family's expectations nearly crushing her, she chose to stay and marry sweet, dutiful Niall, who fit into her family perhaps better than she did. Now, at age 32, she finds herself at a crossroads again.

"It was like there was this other, wonderful version of me out there that perhaps I was supposed to be living," she says. But obligation is not shrugged off lightly. Jeanie needs to shut off all other voices (living and dead) and figure out her future once and for all.

In a novel that moves between the past and the present, Anne Griffin (author of the highly praised "When All Is Said") writes about what happens in a life when you are afraid to make choices that might hurt those who count on you — and what happens when you do.

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