strangers, I should add, not entirely succumbed to the juice of the barley (âHe has the drink taken, but not to unseemly excess,â in local police lingo), have told me about aspects of their lives that they possibly wouldnât even think of sharing with their spouses. Maybe for them itâs a toss-up between a mumbled recitation of sins in the confessionals of the towering gray cathedrallike edifice up the street, or in the more relaxed raconteurship here with someone youâve never met before and may never meet or remember again.
However, in the case of Adrienne, I guarantee youâll certainly remember your first meeting. Thereâs an aura about her that lures you to the bar. She looks straight at youâgentle eyes from a pretty but proud face framed by long blond tresses. She exudes kindness, sensitivity, a quiet wisdom, and a sense of funâfrisky and bubblyâbeneath her placid demeanor. You feel you could trust her with all your worldly woes and worries and that sheâd find time to listen while pulling half a dozen pints, making change, taking orders for sandwiches, and smiling at someoneâs corny joke down the bar.
Following the publication of McCarthyâs Bar , with a photograph of Adrienneâs colorful little pub on the cover along with a behatted Peter and a nun in her black robe supping a pint of Guinness on a bench outside the front door, the place has become a bit of a shrine with travel book lovers.
âEvery day I find Iâm talking about him to strangers,â Adrienne told me. âI tell them the way heâd pop in after the publication of the book and peep his head around the door and sigh with relief when he saw that nothing had really changed. I think he dreaded that the popularity of his book would spoil things around here. But, except for a few extra visitors and blow-in residents, itâs still a place for the locals really. Occasionally weâll get letters from people who loved his bookâreally sweet messages. Even poems and things. I think itâs a great honor for Peteâand for usâall this affection and interest.
âBut it happened soâ¦accidentally, I suppose youâd say. Pete was at a bit of a loose end. He was working a lot with the BBC but was getting restless. So his agent suggestedâwith a name like McCarthy and despite a very English upbringingâhe should do a book on Ireland. She saidââJust go and youâll know what to write.â And after heâd spent a few days here in Castletownbere, he suddenly knew what he wanted to do, and the book just sort of wrote itself. And he was so gratefulâto usâto the whole place. And thenâsurprise, surprise!âhe called us a year or so later and said âIâve written a bit of a book about Irish barsâ¦â and I thought âOh yeahâ¦â
ââWhat do you think about the title McCarthyâs Bar ?â
âAnd I said âSounds greatâ¦â
ââDo you mind if I put your pub on the coverâ¦â
âAnd I said âNo, thatâs fine. Think itâll sell a dozen or twoâ¦?â and then it turned out to be a best seller. It was on the charts for over a year. But you kind of just take that on board. Thereâs no panic about it. Itâs just nice that people can come and chatâ¦I mean, we were here long before Pete made us famous and thatâs what he liked. He even signed one of his books for meââTo Adrienne, definitely the best bar in the world!â
âItâs so nice to have that. We both really clicked the way you do with some peopleâ¦It all began when he first came here. It was my birthday, and he looked a bit low, so I said âWhy donât you come along?â and we had a great time and he just kind of became part of the family. He was quite well known on the BBC doing travelogues, but we didnât know any of thatâ¦and
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