The Importance of Being Aisling*
(*That’s ASH-ling-small-town girl, big heart, no clue)
First things first, CONGRATS to Emer McLysaght & Sarah Breen for winning the SPECSAVERS POPULAR FICTION BOOK OF THE YEAR 2018 at the An Post Irish Book Awards on Tuesday evening. I was delighted to be there as a guest of writing.ie and yes ladies the ‘curly hair-dos’ were just fab 🙂
So today it is an honour to be on tour celebrating the phenomenon that is Aisling.
The Importance of Being Aisling follows on from the success of Oh My God, What a Complete Aisling and has just been released with Michael Joseph (an imprint of Penguin Books)
Please do read on for my thoughts…
About the Book:
She’s a country girl learning to love the city sophistication of unlimited Pinot Greej and brunch, though smashed avocado still mystifies her. She can plan anything, from Secret Santa for her ungrateful colleagues to a hen party for not one but two brides.
But even Aisling is thrown off course when her job and relationship suddenly go up in smoke.
Life in the city was supposed to be glamorous and grown-up, but all at once she’s heading home to live with her mother. (Not without a detour to Vegas first – she’s unemployed and single, not dead.)
But between making new friends and rivals, and finding her eye caught by a very handsome but very unavailable new man, going home is full of surprises.
Could small town life actually hold the answers Aisling is missing?
Book Review:
I read Oh My God What a Complete Aisling (Review HERE) after receiving a copy of it in my goodie bag at the Irish Book Awards 2017. Now it’s 2018 and Aisling has become a celebrity in her own right, the Irish Bridget Jones if you like, with her second book The Importance of Being Aisling now gracing our bookshelves.
As you are all probably aware by now, I’m Irish and there have been times when I have been Aisling. There are so many occasions in this series that I get, I really do. The locations, the clothes, the addiction to the GAA…all understood. Aisling is in every Irish woman I would dare to claim. We all most certainly have been friends with Aisling and I have no doubt, when I worked in Dublin, that I was considered by many to be an Aisling.
But who is Aisling?
Aisling is a warm-hearted cailín (Irish for girl).She is the friend you want (and need) in your life when your world turns upside down. Aisling is totally reliable, totally trustworthy and guaranteed to always be there for you. Aisling is also, however, considered a culchie by some of her city colleagues, a naive country girl with her funny ways.
Aisling has been through a tough break-up and a much-hoped for reunion with her longtime boyfriend John. Aisling had her life mapped out and John was always part of it. But now, back together again, Aisling is all too aware that the magic is gone. While she still loves John, she’s just not in love with him anymore. Time has passed since the tragic death of her beloved Dad. With her brother due to return to Australia, Aisling is very conscious of the fact that her mother will be very lonely. This responsibility sits heavily on Aisling’s shoulders. Two of her flatmates are getting married, leaving Aisling without a home and, to top it all off, she is unexpectedly made redundant from a job in pensions that she always considered steady.
Aisling’s life is in turmoil with so many changes but yet, being Aisling, she holds her head up high and does what’s right. She makes the decision to return home, to leave her city life behind and to make a new start for herself.
‘I’d spent the bulk of my early twenties fairly obsessed with moving back home. I wanted the little job. The little car. The big wedding. The big house. It all hinged on John. I was desperate for him to propose…but it never happened and I eventually realised none of that stuff really mattered to me, not when I actually thought about it. It seems mad now that I’ll be moving home without him’
But first she heads off on a wild trip to Las Vegas with her buddies……
‘There’s a buzzing. What is it? Oh Jesus, my head. And my mouth. It’s like each one of my teeth is wrapped in sandpaper. My blood feels like it’s fizzing. And what is that buzzing? I peel an eye open, and then another. It’s pitch dark, save for a sliver of light coming in through the thick blackout curtains. Where the blazes am -? Oh, of course, I’m in Las Vegas.’
When I reviewed Oh My God What a Complete Aisling, I referred to the fact that some of Aisling’s characteristics were deliberately over-embellished by the authors, with a stereotypical approach to the image of the country girl. While in some cases in this book, it is the same (and trust me when I say that they provide for some serious laugh-out-loud moments) I found The Importance of Being Aisling a book that was more thought-provoking. Initially, when Aisling returns home, her life settles back to the old routines of falling out of discos and basically getting hammered. The old gang are reunited.
‘Full of Guinness and lethal margaritas, John is absorbed in a sea of check shirts and Wrangler jeans as the local lads come together in one heaving mass of Ricky Martin fans. The gas thing is they don’t have a drop of Latino blood between them, but you’d never think it the way they’re gyrating around the place. I realise I’m pissed now too, screaming the lyrics at Sadhbh, who’s happily screaming them back at me, arms in the air. The girls – Sharon, Deirdre and Maeve – appear around us and we all fire our bags on the floor and start shaking what our mammies gave us.’
As the weeks pass though, the reality of life hits home for Aisling. Surrounded by her friends and neighbours, she realises that she might just be needed here. There is a very serious side to this story, as Aisling is witness to the impact of domestic abuse on the lives of others. The authors handle the topic with great sensitivity bringing home to us all the horrific daily reality faced by many women. Who knows what goes on behind closed doors? One small act of kindness can bring a ray of light to the lives of these people and with Aisling, well being Aisling, her hand of friendship is that light.
Aisling is older now. Her ideas on life have changed. Experience has taught her alot about how the best laid plans are easily up-rooted.
The Importance of Being Aisling still carries the same humour as Oh My God, packed full with the same Irish wit, but Aisling is older and wiser and her reflections and relationships have matured. There are elements of sadness to this book, with references to very real experiences that have impacted many of us, no matter our nationality.
The Importance of Being Aisling will have a more universal appeal, as the transition from a young woman in her early twenties, with pie-high dreams and ambitions, will ring true for many of us, followed closely by the reality of life in our later twenties and early thirties.
I’ll leave you with Aisling’s wise words…
‘Location doesn’t matter – home is what you make of it. It’s the people you surround yourself with’
Charming. Witty. Engaging. Real.
Purchase Link ~ The Importance of Being Aisling
Author Bio
Emer McLysaght and Sarah Breen conceived the character of Aisling in their sitting room in 2008, when they began to observe the many traits, characteristics and quirks of a very particular type of Irish girl; one they identified around them and one they identified with.
Oh My God What a Complete Aisling was an instant sensation in Ireland and the number one bestselling adult fiction title of 2017
Emer McLysaght is the former editor of the Daily Edge and has wored extensively in journalism and radio.
Sarah Breen is a journalist whose work has appeared in Stellar, Image, U, the Irish Independent and The Gloss
Twitter @EmerTheScreamer & @SarahJayBee
Fab review!
Thanks so much Nicki. X
Loved this book – great review, spot on! hope there’s many more releases to come in this series 🙂
Laura thank you so much! Delighted to hear that. I hope so too 🙂
I love this review! I’m definitely adding the books to my wish list!
Wonderful Meggy. Thank you x
Fab review, The book sounds great, its on my must read list.
Thank you so much Angie. I appreciate that! I hope you enjoy 🙂