I'VE READ NINE novels by Banville, but never, until this one, any of his mysteries. As it happens, this is the first of his mysteries to be published under his own name, rather than the pen name "Benjamin Black." One review I read suggested that Banville made an exception this time because of the gravity of the issue in the novel's background: pedophilia in the priesthood and the Irish Roman Catholic Church's extraordinary efficiency in covering it up.
He may also have decided to put his own name on it just because it's really, really good. I do not read many mysteries and enjoy even fewer, but I was impressed by this one. It has a lot of Banvillean virtues: diamond-eye social observation, masterly prose, and a first-person chapter from the point of view of Father Tom, the pedophiliac priest, that is absolutely convincing and absolutely chilling, pure Dostoevsky.
There was also a small but perfect gift for readers who, like me, lean more to the literary Banville. Snow is falling for a great deal of Snow, which called to my mind Joyce's classic short story, "The Dead." I was delighted when Strafford, the novel's detective, dropped an allusion to Joyce's early masterpiece in a phone conversation with his superiors:
"Where would he have gone to? Is it now snowing down there, like it is here?"
"Yes, Chief. Snow is general all over Ireland."
"Is it?"
"It's a quotation--never mind."
Strafford could hear his superior breathing down the line. Hackett valued Strafford, but also considered him too clever by half.
That's all, but it's plenty. If you recognize the quotation, you know it occurs in the devastating final paragraph of Joyce's final story, and that the snow that falls both on Gabriel Conroy's Dublin and on Michael Furey's graveyard in Galway falls alike on "the living and the dead," that Gabriel has just learned the lesson that the living and the dead constitute a whole, that the past is always ineradicably with us. The past is still very much part of the present for the boys, now men, that Father Tom abused--PTSD, we could also call it--and that little Joycean inflection explains why Snow is the perfect title for Banville's novel.