“Declan Burke is his own genre. The Lammisters dazzles, beguiles and transcends. Virtuoso from start to finish.” – Eoin McNamee “This bourbon-smooth riot of jazz-age excess, high satire and Wodehouse flamboyance is a pitch-perfect bullseye of comic brilliance.” – Irish Independent Books of the Year 2019 “This rapid-fire novel deserves a place on any bookshelf that grants asylum to PG Wodehouse, Flann O’Brien or Kyril Bonfiglioli.” – Eoin Colfer, Guardian Best Books of the Year 2019 “The funniest book of the year.” – Sunday Independent “Declan Burke is one funny bastard. The Lammisters ... conducts a forensic analysis on the anatomy of a story.” – Liz Nugent “Burke’s exuberant prose takes centre stage … He plays with language like a jazz soloist stretching the boundaries of musical theory.” – Totally Dublin “A mega-meta smorgasbord of inventive language ... linguistic verve not just on every page but every line.Irish Times “Above all, The Lammisters gives the impression of a writer enjoying himself. And so, dear reader, should you.” – Sunday Times “A triumph of absurdity, which burlesques the literary canon from Shakespeare, Pope and Austen to Flann O’Brien … The Lammisters is very clever indeed.” – The Guardian

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Jim Burke: RIP

My Uncle Jim died last week. I was in the States at the time, and just about made it back in time for the funeral. He’d been ill for some time, so everyone had time to prepare, Jim included. I don’t know if anyone ever dies happy, but he’d made his peace with himself, the world and his God.
  He was my father’s younger brother, and a good, good man. A gentleman according to the traditional meaning, and also in that he combined being gentle with being a man. He was a terrific hurler in his youth, no mean accolade when you hail from Wexford, and it was stirring as it was poignant to see his old comrades turn out to present a guard of honour on our way into the cemetery. You need to be a man of real courage and heart to prosper on the Wexford and Waterford hurling fields, a man who can combine ferocity and style. But when he left the field he left the ferocity behind him, and the style he brought to the game was intrinsic to his character.
  He was well-read and travelled, but he always had the grace to wear his learning lightly. He had a keen intelligence, and served for many years as Head Designer with Waterford Glass. In his spare time he liked to paint and write. Perhaps that’s why he took an interest in me.
  In my early teens, everyone I knew was aware that I liked to write – bad poetry and English essays, for the most part, although Jim wasn’t fussed about their quality. Even though no one I knew ever ridiculed my vague ambition to be a writer, Jim was the first person to take it seriously, to engage with me with the kind of seriousness every young writer craves, whether or not he or she realises it at the time. We had many long conversations, about books and writers for the most part, but wide-ranging enough to take in politics, travel, sport and pretty much anything that came up. He probably thought I was precocious, but he never said. After our first such conversation, when he was visiting us in Sligo, he took himself off into town and returned with a battered second-hand copy of ULYSSES, the only one he could find in the entire town, and in a tobacconists at that.
  I still have it, of course, although I’ve yet to read it through despite a few attempts. What mattered to me at the time was that Jim thought I was in some way kin to both himself and Joyce, that I was a member of some vaguely defined brotherhood of letters. It has been, in writing terms, my lucky charm ever since; it’s on the desk before me as I write this.
  I was lucky enough, many years later, to pay him the tribute I believed he deserved. Jim travelled to Dublin for the launch of my first book, EIGHTBALL BOOGIE, and in my speech I recounted the tale of ULYSSES and its being my lucky charm. People laughed when I said I hadn’t read it, possibly out of relief given that most of them hadn’t read it either, but the point I wanted to make was that Jim could have given me a copy of CRIME AND PUNISHMENT, or MOBY DICK, or NODDY GOES TO MARKET – it wasn’t the book itself that mattered, or its author, but the gift of it, the gift of collusion and inspiration and being taken seriously.
  Today I know that all I have in common with James Joyce is that we’re both Irish and our books are printed on paper. I don’t know what Jim made of my writing crime fiction – his tastes were a little more esoteric, and he favoured Hemingway above all others. But he understood at the time that it was in words that my greatest hope of happiness lay, and took the time, effort and patience to ensure that I was always, regardless of my regular digressions in life, travelling towards fulfilling that ambition.
  It’s hard not to be selfish at a time like this, to hoard your precious memories of someone who meant so much to you, to burnish them into something unique. But that would be unfair to Jim, who was equally fond of all his brother’s sons and daughters, and who was loved equally in return. He had a great rapport with my mother too, but then he was a charming rogue when the mood took him, with a devilish twinkle in his eye.
  But it’s my father, of course, who will miss him most. They were lucky enough to be friends as well as brothers, and team-mates, from a very early age, and it was intoxicating to hear Jim tell stories about my father from when they were boys and young men. We know our father better for knowing Jim, for he was a marvellous story-teller, and for that alone we will always be in his debt. He left behind the first draft of a manuscript called WHEN WE WERE YOUNG, and he has bequeathed it to me to do with it what I will, and I hope to be one day a good enough writer to do it justice.
  Beannacht Dé leat, Jim.

15 comments:

J. Kingston Pierce said...

Wow, that is a fine remembrance, indeed, Declan. I know, because my eyes are welling up in memory of your uncle, even though I never knew him. He made an excellent choice in willing you his manuscript. I fully expect to see it edited and in print someday--a last tribute to his life and to those he loved. Like you.

Cheers,
Jeff

Lrakyawnoc said...

Sorry to hear about Jim's passing, Dec. I only met your uncle once when he gave Kate and I a lift to Donegal for the wedding. I have to say he seemed a gracious, genial man who instantly put two strangers at ease as he talked with great passion on many random and interesting things. I remember him waxing lyrical on the Great Gatsby as the best a novel could be (I've since read it, no doubt subconsciously buoyed on by his heart recommendation). Nice tribute here - would love to see what you could do with his manuscript. K.

Gerard Brennan said...

Sorry for your loss, Dec, but that's a great tribute to your uncle.

Good luck

gb

Corey Wilde said...

I'm sorry for your loss. You do your uncle most proud, sir.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Well, bless him. That's a lovely tribute.
===================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com/

Declan Burke said...

Much obliged, folks ... he really was a terrific person to know.

Cheers, Dec

Stuart Neville said...

What an excellent tribute. My condolences.

Dana King said...

Beautifully put, Dec. Please accept my condolences, and take an extra minute with any nephews and nieces you have the next time you see them. We are all immortal through the knowledge and memories we pass on to our loved ones, as your moving tribute has clearly shown.

Anonymous said...

Sorry to hear about your uncle, Dec.
sam millar

Anonymous said...

Seems to have been a really nice guy.
My condolences.

Marco

The Unquiet Man said...

I remember - I don't know if I was twelve or thirteen (young in any case) - I passed through the living room in the old house (the one between the sitting room and the kitchen) one day, and you and Jim were sitting down talking. You had your eyes closed, talking about something I can't recall, but you had Jim enthralled. He was sitting forward on the edge of the armchair, chin in hand. Like the typical teenager, I wasn't interested in the conversation taking place and turned on the TV. I remember Jim asking if you wanted to move the conversation to the kitchen where it was quiet. He didn't tell me to turn off the TV, too polite for that. This wasn't his house and I wasn't his son.

It's one of my first memories of Jim, but it'll never be the strongest. That is, and will always be, his voice.

Anonymous said...

You have done him proud, Dec. Your uncle lives on in your words. And great, thoughtful words they are to. I am sure he will rest in peace knowing how much you loved him. For Lily too. I imagine he'd have idolised her? Such an innocent beauty she is...

May your uncle have had a good life before passing and Lily a good life before her. A part of that will be telling Lily about her great uncle.

My sympathies to you Dec. He'd want you to write on, as many others do. So write on and believe in his support. Never let the support of his strength and belief in you diminish.

Patricia said...

Belated condolences. What you describe runs in your family.

Anonymous said...

Beautiful tribute

Anonymous said...

Beautiful tribute for a great man