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Furlong feels that he was granted a lucky break, although not knowing his real father’s identity plagues him. One day, Furlong is making a fuel delivery to the convent that is separated from his daughters’ school by only a wall.
Summary. In Chapter 6, Furlong returns home from the convent. Eileen informs him that he has missed first Mass; Furlong—without mentioning the woman he found in the coal house—tells her that he had tea at the convent. They open the envelope from Mother Superior to find a large Christmas tip.
Small Things Like These study guide contains a biography of Claire Keegan, literature essays, quiz questions, major themes, characters, and a full summary and analysis. The Small Things Like These Community Note includes chapter-by-chapter summary and analysis, character list, theme list, historical context, author biography and quizzes written ...
Claire Keegan’s novella Small Things Like These is written from the third-person limited perspective. Keegan utilizes the past tense throughout the narrative. Bill Furlong is the coal and timber merchant in a small Irish town in the mid-1980s.
The protagonist is Furlong, Eileen's husband and father to five daughters. Unlike the previous Christmas festivities, this year is harder economically. Furlong is a merchant dealer specializing in coal and timber, and he has about ten employees. Keegan depicts Furlong as a self-made person who works hard to achieve what he wants.
Furlong is the son of a single mother who worked as a domestic servant for Mrs. Wilson, a wealthy Protestant widow. His maternal relatives disowned them, but Mrs. Wilson kept Sarah Furlong employed. Furlong was born on April 1, 1946, April Fool’s Day.
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Summary. Bill Furlong is a coal and timber merchant in his late 30s, who is married and has five daughters. His mother became pregnant at the age of 16 and was cut off by her family, but Mrs Wilson, the Protestant widow who employed her, kept her on and Bill grew up in her house.