Trust: A Fractured Fable
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A darkly funny memoir and investigation into the charms and crimes of the untrustworthy
Romance scams, pyramid schemes, bogus debts and fake news, the world is awash with confidence tricksters and swindlers. But what happens if the fraudster is your lover?
It has been said that trust is a risk masquerading as a promise and, as Hemingway suggested, 'The way to make people trust-worthy is to trust them'. Once we have fallen under the spell of malevolent hucksters, their power is real, as is the loss of self and hope when the spell breaks.
A hybrid memoir and a personal detective story, Trust is an exploration of what it means to trust, why we trust, and what happens when trust is betrayed. With a particular view to fraud and corruption within the hallowed walls of sandstone universities, Ryckmans brings to light the oft subtle, brutal nature of control that fraudsters have over their victims, and shows the deep impacts their actions have on others personally and professionally. The cover up -- sometimes said to be worse than the crime -- has insidious effects.
Trust is a fractured fable. It is darkly funny, wistful, and spare in tone and approach.
'The extraordinary story of an Irish Ripley, a fraudster and conman who fooled central banks, elite universities, major companies and scores of individual business leaders is in itself captivating and astounding, but he also plied a series of smart sophisticated women with seductive invitations, extravagant gifts and lashings of Yeats and, as Jeanne Ryckmans so deftly reconstructs, it all fell apart when he got violent with her.' - Anne Summers, author of Damned Whores and God's Police
'I read it in one sitting and loved loved loved it. Truly. It is beautifully and cleverly told, and the various devices -- the poetry, the nicknames, the world-wandering, the little hands, the carpets, Paddington -- all work splendidly; - Simon Winchester, author of The Professor and the Madman
'Vivid and transparent. Deft. I was absolutely hooked from the first paragraph, and the creeping sense that something was amiss was masterful. The fundamental power is the unflinching basis in truth.' - Professor Joanna Benjamin, Emeritus Professor of Law, The London School of Economics
Jeanne Ryckmans
Jeanne Ryckmans has worked for two decades in Australian publishing. Now a literary agent, she was formerly senior publisher at Random House and HarperCollins Australia. Prior to this she worked in arts television in France and Australia as presenter and producer, and was features editor at ELLE and books editor for Vogue Australia. She is the author of two books.
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Trust - Jeanne Ryckmans
Endorsements for Trust
The extraordinary story of an Irish Ripley, a fraudster and conman who fooled central banks, elite universities, major companies and scores of individual business leaders is in itself captivating and astounding, but he also plied a series of smart sophisticated women with seductive invitations, extravagant gifts and lashings of Yeats…
Anne Summers AO, author of Unfettered and Alive, and Damned Whores and God’s Police.
Raw and honest…A sadly too common tale of how ego and hubris wreak harm, but equally a testament that the only way to break these cycles is to tell the truth.
Amy Richards, Producer of the Emmy-nominated Woman (Viceland) and author of We Are Makers.
Vivid and transparent. Deft. I was absolutely hooked from the first paragraph, and the creeping sense that something was amiss was masterful. The fundamental power is the unflinching basis in truth.
Professor Joanna Benjamin (Emeritus Professor of Law, The London School of Economics).
A gripping and haunting account of trust betrayed that you won’t be able to put down – a story of dreams, reality, and the wide gap between the two that too often engulfs us all.
Amanda L. Tyler, co-author with Ruth Bader Ginsburg on Justice, Justice Thou Shalt Pursue.
This brave fable is an intimate portrait of a relationship destroyed by betrayal, as well as a reflection on our troubled time’s preoccupation with breaches of the public trust. The author leads us thus to the moral of the story: that trust is both fragile and essential and must somehow be helped to flourish; that every betrayal of trust, public or private, ultimately harms each of us and diminishes our ability to live together with open hearts.
Vicki Laveau-Harvie, author of 2019 Stella Prize-winning memoir The Erratics.
Jeanne Ryckmans
Jeanne Ryckmans has worked for two decades in Australian publishing. Now a literary agent, she was formerly senior publisher at Random House and HarperCollins Australia. Prior to this she worked in arts television in France and Australia as presenter, producer and documentary director and was features editor at ELLE Magazine and books editor for Vogue Australia. She is the author of two previous books.
First published in Australia in 2023
by Upswell Publishing
Perth, Western Australia
upswellpublishing.com
This book is copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part may be reproduced by any process without written permission.
Enquiries should be made to the publisher.
Copyright © 2023 Jeanne Ryckmans
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
Every effort has been made to trace the holders of copyright material. If you have any information concerning copyright material in this book please contact the publisher via their website.
ISBN: 9780645536911
eISBN: 9781743823224
Cover design by Chil3, Fremantle
Upswell Publishing is assisted by the State of Western Australia through its funding program for arts and culture.
For my daughter, Cecilia
I always thought it would be better to be a fake somebody than a real nobody.
Tom Ripley, The Talented Mr Ripley
His stories were good because he imagined them intensely, so intensely that he came to believe them.
Patricia Highsmith, The Talented Mr Ripley
The university is a bazaar where a thousand wares are spread haphazardly, while the scholars themselves are turned into peddlers, touts, and pimps, desperately competing to hustle for a few more suckers.
Pierre Ryckmans in his Boyer Lecture, ‘The View from the Bridge’, 1996.
He had the kind of Scotch-Irish accent which some women find irresistible, and which makes all men feel for their wallet, to make sure it is still there.
James Franklin, Corrupting the Youth
OCTOBER 2019, INIS Bó FINNE
On Thursday 31 October 2019, the Irish poet and playwright Tom MacIntyre died at the age of eighty-seven. A memorial tribute published on the same day in The Irish Times. There was one glaring factual error: the author described MacIntyre as a ‘player of the ancient, fast and furious team game of hurling’. Anyone familiar with MacIntyre would know he was never a hurler. He had played Gaelic football—a very different game—and was a champion goalkeeper in his youth for Cavan, his county, famously saving two penalties in an Ulster championship game against Monaghan in 1958.
The following evening at Day’s Bar, the sole pub open during the winter season on the remote island of Inishbofin off the west coast of Ireland, locals perched on stools with their Guinness and Galway Hooker stouts by the open fire. The author of the MacIntyre tribute, a former professor, was flapping his copy of The Irish Times above his balding pate, trying to wheedle the uncooperative patrons who were at Day’s for a quiet pint into holding a wake for ‘the great Irish poet’. He proposed he would read his tribute out aloud, or perhaps even recite a curated collection of MacIntyre’s poetry: ‘Would anyone care to sing or play an instrument? It will be great craic.’
Billy O’Grady, owner of Wind and Tide, the island’s only bookshop, made a quick telephone call to a friend up the road and asked her to come quickly and help evict the drunk professor from the pub. ‘Please tell that gobshite to wind his neck in before someone lynches him.’
The friend made her way down to the old quay. ‘Get feckin home,’ she ordered the professor. ‘You’re hammered and making a right eejit of yourself in the pub talking shite about wanting to hold a wake for that feckin MacIntyre.’
The raffish Tom MacIntyre arrived on the small island of Inishbofin one spring in the early 1970s. He brought in tow Deborah Tall, a pretty, young American graduate student twenty years his junior whom he had charmed during a short spell as a visiting writer in the English department at the University of Michigan and convinced to move to Ireland to live with him. I am going to an island off the west coast of Ireland with an Irish writer, wrote Tall. The thought still jolts me… Listening to him in class was more like watching a one-man show, the script of which got written on the spot… When I asked him once, on behalf of several friends, if he’d come talk about Yeats some evening at our dorm, he said no, but that he’d talk to me about Yeats one evening over a drink. Tall documented their doomed relationship in her memoir, The Island of the White Cow: Memories of an Irish Island. An accidental inhabitant, Tall’s experience of remote island life was not always a happy one as MacIntyre played out his midlife crisis amidst the backdrop of the Wild Atlantic Way. The islanders had little to do with the couple. Some found MacIntyre aloof and living off their generosity; others felt he was mocking them behind their backs.
MacIntyre and Tall departed after a few short years. Their romantic island idyll shattered. The islanders were not unhappy to see him leave.
OCTOBER 2016, INIS Bó FINNE
Forty-five years later, in early autumn 2016, I set foot on the same Inishbofin pier in a natural and calm sheltered harbour with an Irish professor who had romantically whisked me off to ‘his island’. Inishbofin or Inis Bó Finne translates from Gaelic as ‘Island of the White Cow’. The name is said to have derived from a legend of two fishermen lost in a heavy fog who happened upon an enchanted island. They lit a fire for warmth. Out of nowhere an old woman appeared, driving a white cow along a shingle beach. The woman struck the cow with a stick, and it turned into stone. The woman and the cow are said to return every seven years to warn of impending disaster.
A small, red 75ft steel passenger ferry, the Island Discovery, took us from the quaint fishing village of Cleggan a half hour across the glistening North Atlantic to