Read Ireland Book Reviews, May 2001
The Pursuit
of Happiness by Douglas Kennedy
This novel is set in Manhattan, Thanksgiving
eve, 1945. The war was over, and Eric Smythes party was in full swing.
All his clever Greenwich Village friends were there. So too was his sister
Sara - an independent, canny young woman, starting to make her way in
the big city. And then in walked a gate crasher, Jack Malone - a U.S.
Army journalist just back from a defeated Germany, and a man whose world-view
did not tally with that of Eric and his friends. The chance meeting between
Sara and Jack - and the choices they both made in the wake of it - would
eventually have profound consequences, both for themselves and for those
closest to them. And the effect of their actions would reverberate within
their families for decades afterwards. Set amidst the dynamic optimism
of post-war New York and the subsequent nightmare of the McCarthy witch-hunts,
this novel is a great tragic love story; a tale of divided loyalties,
decisive moral choices, and the random workings of destiny.
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The Drawbridge
by Marie McGann
This novel is set amongst the Polish
community in Crouch End. Brid Finucane lives in a state of ordered chaos
in both her head and her house. When her husband disappears, she is forced
to confront her past and its sad consequence, together with lone motherhood,
alcoholism and a Polish war hero as a suitor. Her swirls of emotion are
compounded by her position as an expatriate Irishwoman living in a North
London suburb. She involves herself with the charming Adam Barowski, and
faces the terrifying possibility of falling in love for the first time.
But when Brids husband Stanley, after a long absence, sends a message
from the Sudan, Brid is forced to work towards her most major life decision.
This novel explores both Irish and Polish experiences of alienation, while
at its core it is a story about the hard choices in a womans life: choices
about love and independence, loyalty and dependence.
Love in One
Tradition by Peter Cunningham
This is the third volume of Peter
Cunninghams acclaimed trilogy (after Tapes of the River Delta and Consequences
of the Heart) set in the fictional Irish town of Monument. When Jasmine
joins the staff of the Monument Gazette, she finds herself drawn to Kaiser,
the lonely, partially-deaf maintenance man, who spent his childhood in
an orphanage and knows nothing of how he came to grow up in the peaceful
town of Monument. Jasmine decides that she will help Kaiser to find the
truth about his origins. She keeps a journal in which she records her
research and her feelings for him as their friendship deepens into love.
But as she delves into the history of the town and the three generations
of the Pender family who have owned and run the Gazette, she uncovers
not only Kaisers violent past, but also an appalling secret that if revealed
will shatter the lives of many. Kaiser and Jasmines love is strong enough
to overturn the web of lies on which an empire is founded - but is it
strong enough to withstand the outcome? This is a grand, lyrical novel
of passion and betrayal told by a master Irish storyteller.
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The Eggmans
Apprentice by Maurice Leitch
Orphaned at a cruelly young age by
the death of both parents, little Hugo Dinsmore is torn from his pampered
life in the great heart of County Antrim, Northern Ireland and plunged
into the world of brutish country relatives, a world where his refined
ways and small stature are a constant source of mockery for them and torment
for him. Survival means learning to stay sly and hidden, not only in the
vast, rumbling ruin they call Larkhill, but in the fields and woods, and
then later at school where he discovers a talent for retribution and petty
thieving. A remarkably pure singing voice is something else he finds himself
blessed with, drawing him to the attention of the Eggman, a feared local
gangster who gets him to perform for him and his rich cronies at their
parties of well-dressed mascot, travelling around with the Eggman and
his enforcer friends in the back of a vast pink Cadillac. Gradually he
breaks away from his old life in Larkhill, but when the Eggmans grip
tightens and a criminal price must be paid for all the fine clothes and
high living, Hugo decides to break free in his own spectacular but haphazard
fashion.
Doubletime by
Micky Donnelly
As if he didnt have enough trouble,
Myles has just met Matt, his younger, thinner and more stylish doppleganger.
Just what he needs, on top of keeping up with sexy Mex, dodging the gruesome
twins sent by a very, very cross landlord and - oh yes, the Wife, who
is pissed off with him yet again. Were in the dislocated world of double-time,
a hall of mirrors where mistaken identity is the norm and where appearances
are never, ever, to be trusted. Playful, fast and clever, this debut novel
from the acclaimed Irish artist tests language, literature and perception
to the limit on its way to a dramatic, last-ditch climax.
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Juno & Juliet
by Julian Gough
Galway: its a long way from Tipperary,
if you are eighteen, reluctantly beautiful and one of a pair of twins
eager to learn about everything that life, especially college life in
Galway, has to offer. So, when Juno and Juliet Taylor start their first
year at university together, disappointment reaches up and tugs them down
as all around they encounter a failure of enthusiasm. Yet, soon, theyre
inching their way back up again - theres the drunken antics of the theatre;
theres cute, shy, kind Michael; and theres the pure passion, pure helium
inspiration of the most wonderful of teachers, David Hennessey. And then
again, theres also the stalker, with his poison-pen letters; theres
trips home and trips into inner space; theres unrequited and mis-consummated
love; and theres easy death. Theres almost too much of everything, too
much for these twins to handle. But then perhaps the incomparable Mr.
Hennessey can help bear the load? This is a happy book, and a very funny
one.
The Simurgh
and the Nightingale by Roger Derham
Simurgh is, in Persian mythology,
a large mythical bird of great age believed to have the power of reasoning
and speech. This novel is set in 1631. Catherine Cullen, a barber-surgeon
and free woman of Dublin, visits Baltimore in south-west Ireland. During
a raid she is taken prisoner by Algerian pirates and taken to North Africa.
Her surgical skills gain her respect and the means to freedom. This comes
at a great price involving passion, death and betrayal. She falls in love
with a Ragusan knight and their destinies seem intertwined, as his quest
and her fate lead to Constantinople and vicious rival forces. Their story
ends in Ragusa in 1667. This is a novel of power and imagination.
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Swan Song by
William King
A way of life is dying; convents are
up for sale. Only a handful of nuns, like Deirdre Logan, are still teaching.
Nevertheless, Sister Deirdre is content with her life - that is, until
the death of her friend releases a tidal wave of questions about her future
in the Precious Blood congregation. Her inner search leads her to the
brink. She is now caught between loyalty to her vows and her desire as
a woman. This is a multi-layered tale of the joys and trials of the religious
life, and a gripping examination of the personal pressures with which
we all have to deal.
My Favourite
Goodbye by Sheila OFlanagan
Ash OHalloran knows she should be
having the time of her life. Shes blonde, 29, single and self-supporting.
So shouldnt she be out there every night, swilling Chardonnay and falling
in love? Or is she isnt, at least having a great time moaning about it
with her best friends? Doesnt she know how to be a single woman? The
trouble is, Ash likes things the way they are. And she doesnt do impulsive.
Relationships scare her to death - at the first hint of commitment, it
is goodbye. Theres no way shell ever put herself in a position where
she might be hurt. But she knows not everyone is the same - Dan Morland
for instance, who employed her to cook the ultimate dinner the night he
proposed to his ambitious girlfriend. And, as she watches Dan trying to
sort out his life with the woman he loves, Ash begins to wonder if being
Miss Self-Contained and -Secure might also mean missing out.
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Ordnance Survey
Letters Dublin edited by Michael Herity
These Ordnance Survey Letters are
reports written from the field to the Superintendent, Thomas Larcom, at
Mountjoy Barracks in the Phoenix Park, discussing the derivation and English
orthography of the names to be printed on the first edition of the Surveys
maps. John ODonovan and Eugene Curry began work in south Dublin at the
end of March, 1837, after a long spell of research on Tara, County Meath,
in the Dublin libraries over the previous autumn and winter. The fieldwork
was continued by Curry over the summer months after ODonovan had left
for Longford and Roscommon. Encouraged by George Petrie and with the help
of the artists George Du Noyer and T. Butler Williams, Curry described
and mapped more ordinary field monuments than had been so described in
any county in Dublin before.
The Prehistoric
Archaeology of Ireland by John Waddell
On present evidence the human settlement
of Ireland commenced some ten thousand years ago and the prehistoric story
thus covers over eight and a half thousand years. Now in a second edition,
this book provides a chronological account of this long timespan and,
with numerous illustrations, charts the development of the first hunting
and foraging communities, the achievements of the earliest environmentalists
with their remarkable megalithic tombs, and the technological advances
of the later bronze- and iron-using societies. Recent decades have seen
some exceptional developments in the study of the prehistoric archaeology
of Ireland. New discoveries, excavations and research, new theoretical
approaches and the increasing application of radiocarbon and tree-ring
dating techniques have all made an enormous contribution to the better
understanding of this remote past. As well as being a comprehensive and
original review of the subject, this book answers the need for a detailed
introduction to a large body of archaeological evidence.
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Sister Genevieve
by John Rae
This book is the story of Mary OFarrell,
who became Sister Genevieve, one of the most remarkable yet little-known
heroines of our time. A woman of great courage and spirituality, she devoted
her life to the education of the girls of West Belfast during the Troubles,
defying the Catholic Church, the IRA and the British Army in her determination
to give her under-privileged girls the best possible start in life. When
she arrived in 1956, Catholic West Belfast was one of the most deprived
areas in western Europe. By the time she left the secondary school she
led for twenty-five years, she had transformed the lives of its pupils.
More astonishing is that for nineteen of those twenty-five years, she
was running her school in the middle of a guerrilla war between the IRA
and the British Army. The girls were lifted by the army and brought in
for questioning; their homes were taken over by gunmen or turned over
by soldiers; their fathers and brothers were killed on active service
or sentenced to long terms of imprisonment. Yet through all this, Sister
Genevieve remained loyal to her pupils and was compassionate to all who
suffered in the conflict. This book is the biography of an inspirations
headteacher and a fascinating and highly complex woman. It is also a unique
insight into the Troubles from the point of view of the ‘civilians who
were living on the front line.
How the GAA
Survived the Troubles by Desmond Fahy
The GAA can claim members and supporters
in every town, village and parish throughout Northern Ireland. Its clubs
provide a social and cultural centre for the people, and are an integral
part of community life. However, for more than thirty years, the events
of the Troubles have represented a significant challenge for the GAA.
With its members and property coming under concerted and often savage
attacks, the Association has been forced to move away from its rigid non-political
stance and respond publicly to what was happening in the wider society.
Focusing on the human stories behind the facts, this book traces the GAAs
journey through the turmoil - both political and social - on the three
decades of the Troubles. The author interviews the families of victims
and speaks to members about their experiences, and also discusses the
effects and future of the controversial rule prohibiting members of the
British Security Forces and RUC from joining the Association.
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Contemplating
Ireland: Images and Verse Photographs by James Gleason
This book is a visual meditation on
this ancient island. James Gleasons photographs, complemented by selections
from Irelands rich poetic tradition, transport the reader to ancient
Celtic burial sites, barren coastal islands and crumbling monastic ruins.
Haunting land and seascapes draw the reader to quietness: from Kerrys
mountain ranges and Clares Cliffs of Moher to Connemaras stone walls
and Mayos sea-carved coastline. Long-since deserted castles, houses and
churches awake imaginations of generations past.
The Celtic
Cross: An Illustrated History and Celebration by Nigel Pennick
This book combines a fascinating and
informative text with the authors beautifully detailed line drawings
and photographs to present an historical overview of the emblem acknowledged
throughout the world as the symbol of Celtic Christianity. The book traces
the rich diversity of the Celtic Cross through its historical background
and predecessors, by way of the evolution and development of Celtic Christianity,
and through to its influence to the form and pattern of Celtic art. In
addition, the author provides a comprehensive gazetteer covering sites
in Ireland, Britain and Brittany in France as a guide for those who wish
to celebrate the cross as a continuing manifestation of the finest traditions
of Celtic art.
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Bringing It
All Back Home: The Influence of Irish Music 2nd edition by Nuala OConnor
Irish music is flourishing in all
corners of the world today, thanks to centuries of emigrations. This book
chronicles the remarkable journey of Irish music from its origins in rural
Irish communities to reinvention in the melting pots of America and Britain,
and return home to a new generation of exciting musicians. In times past,
Irish music belonged to remote rural communities. The hauntingly beautiful
Sean Nos (unaccompanied) singing tradition in the Irish language originated
with them, and there were ballads, jigs, reels, slides and polkas taught
by itinerant dancing masters. Irish emigrants carried their music and
dances with them to the New World, where over time it was changed by their
new lifestyles and enriched by contact with other cultures. Twentieth-century
technology also sent Irish music in unexpected directions. It melded rock,
country, pop, electric folk, blues and the avant-garde, giving birth to
artists from the Clancy Brothers and Bob Dylan, Planxty and Clannad, to
the Pogues, Van Morrison, John Cage, U2 and Sinead OConnor. Modern music
and Irish tradition were alchemised, through the use of instruments like
the bodhran, the harp and the uilleann pipes, to form that unique sound
that is unmistakably Irish.
Ireland: Collectors
Coins Year 00 by R.J. Marles
This is the new edition of a compilation
of averaged selling-prices drawn from dealers lists, auctions, and numismatic
magazines regarding Irish coinage.
Ways of Old:
Traditional Life in Ireland by Olive Sharkey
Imagine Ireland without tractors,
cars, electricity, running water this book brings old Ireland to life
with evocative descriptions of the work, activities and material possessions
of the past. The author describes the implements of the home, the farm,
the garden and for home-crafts, with hundreds of detailed drawings in
an authentic folk-art style. These once-familiar objects - truckle-beds,
bittles, butter-workers and noggins - are looked at anew in the context
of the people who used them and depended on them for their livelihood.
This is a new edition of this well-known classic originally published
in 19.
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Killarney National
Park: A Place to Treasure edited by Bill Quirke
Killarney National Park forms the
backdrop for most visits to Killarney and indeed, County Kerry. It is
the beautiful landscape visitors see in the distance when they play golf,
visit Muckross House or look out a hotel window. Despite the popular image
of a crowded commercialised tourist destination, this backdrop is arguably
Irelands greatest national treasure, over 26,000 acres of relatively
undiscovered and unspoiled native woodlands, lakes, bogs and mountains.
This book takes the reader into this landscape and shows that here indeed
is a place that deserves and needs to be cherished in Ireland. Each contributor
shares his/her expertise and love of this park on a voluntary basis and
the proceeds from the sale of this book will go to supporting nature conservation
projects in the park.
Traditional
Irish Cookery by Carmel Kavenagh
For generations of Irish people around
the world, traditional Irish cookery is the taste of their childhood.
This cookbook is for them - and for everyone else who envies Irelands
reputation for quality, wholesome, satisfying foods. Ireland is a country
where culinary traditions were shaped by a climate, and an economy that
was in turn both unpredictable and demanding. Conditions that could have
stifled creativity in fact inspired originality - and turned the humble
potato into a culinary work of art. As an island nation blessed with lush
pastures, Ireland boasts a wealth of seafood and first-class beef, dairy
products and fresh produce. This book makes the most of them all, proving
theres a lot more to Irish cooking than the famous and ever-popular Irish
stew - although of course youll find that there too.
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Guide to National
and Historic Monuments of Ireland by Peter Harbison
Since its first publication in 1970,
this classic Guide has introduced countless thousands to the archaeological
riches with which the Irish landscape is endowed. Detailed plans and reference
maps, reconstructions and illustrations enliven the text, which describes
all the monuments in close detail. A comprehensive introduction places
these monuments within the context of Irish history. The authors unparalleled
knowledge of, and enthusiasm for, his subject have ensured that this Guide
is an indispensable companion for everyone travelling through Ireland
who wishes to appreciate the riches of its ancient built heritage.
Aspects of
the Belfast Agreement edited by Rick Wilford
This edited collection assembles leading
experts on the politics and constitution of Northern Ireland to explore
and analyse aspects of the 1998 Belfast Agreement. For most, the Agreement
represented an inclusive political bargain, while others perceived it
as an act of betrayal - whether of the Union or, conversely, of republicanism.
These rival interpretations are discussed by key actors both within and
outside Northern Ireland in forging the Agreement. The more immediate
provenance of the Agreement is complemented by a comparison with its often
cited predecessor, the 1973 Sunningdale Agreement, and the formers ‘consociational
plus design is explained while its legislative implementation is set
within the context of cross-cutting constitutionalism ushered in by the
UKs wider devolution process. The collection also discusses the British-Irish
Council, and the early operation of both the Executive Committee and the
Assembly elected in 1998.
[ top ]
Michael Collins
and the Troubles: The Struggle for Irish Freedom 1912-1922 by Ulick OConnor
When Asquith introduced his bill for
Home Rule for Ireland in 1912, he sparked a decade of turbulence and violence
for Ireland and her people. Michael Collins played a crucial role in rekindling
Irelands aspirations for freedom. A leading figure in the nations bitter
and bloody resistance to British Rule, he played a key part in reshaping
Irelands history as we know it today. This new edition of the classic
book originally published in 1975 includes valuable new information about
the secret war against England and provides a fresh and highly dramatic
account of Irelands fight for freedom. Using crucial material from the
archives of General Richard Mulcahy, Collinss Chief of Staff, as well
as personal interviews with Mulcahy, Eamon de Valera, and many other leading
figures, this book is a vivid and often horrifying account of a turning
point in Irish history.
James Chichester-Clark:
Prime Minister of Northern Ireland by Clive Scoular
James Chichester-Clark was Northern
Irelands fifth Prime Minister from May 1969 until March 1971. He was
heavily pressurised by the Civil Rights Association to introduce more
reforms, even though he initiated more than any of his predecessors during
this troubled period in Northern Irelands history. He struggled to implement
the recommendations of the Scarman, Hunt and Cameron reports, particularly
the disbanding of the ‘B Specials. When the Bogside riots of August 1969
erupted, he was compelled to call in British Troops when the RUCs resources
were stretched beyond breaking point. His relations with the British Prime
Ministers, Harold Wilson and Edward Heath, were always fractious. This
biography describes not only these difficult events of his premiership,
but also tells the story of him as a family man and trusted friend.
[ top ]
Children of
the Dead End by Patrick MacGill
Originally published in 1914, this
book is based on the personal memories of the authors life in Ireland
and Scotland during the early 1900s. A bonafide classic, it tells the
story of Dermod Flynn, an independent and feisty youth, who earns a meagre
living as an itinerant farm hand in Donegal and County Tyrone, before
moving to Scotland with a potato-picking squad. Alternatively living on
the road, labouring and navvying, Dermod reads voraciously, begins to
discover his talent as a writer and is eventually lured to Fleet Street,
where he briefly follows a career in journalism. Peopled with extraordinary
characters and told with humour, this novel is a gritty and uncompromising
expose of the near slavery endured by the poor in Ireland and Scotland
at the beginning of the th century. A best-seller from the outset, it
has become a literary classic, unmatched in its accurate portrayal of
this dark corner of Irish and Scottish social history.
Shipwrecks
of Ireland by Edward J. Bourke
The Irish coast has seen shipwrecks
from Celtic times through to the present day. The Romans may have had
a small bridgehead at Loughshinney and continental wars were fought offshore.
The 1588 Spanish Armada came by and left its tribute of twenty-six ships
on the remote west coast. Before 1800 ports like Dublin, Strangford, Waterford,
Kinsale and Wexford were very significant. Hazards around Ireland range
from rocky cliffs of the west coast coupled with a transatlantic landfall
in fog or snow to the treacherous sandbanks of the east coast.
[ top ]
Irish Human
Rights Review 00 edited by Dennis Driscoll
Dealing with contemporary human rights
issues, this review features articles by leading academics and legal practitioners
on questions of human rights and how they relate to Ireland. Issues that
affect all aspects of modern Irish life are raised and explored. Coverage
includes aspects of domestic social policy, law enforcement, etc. which
have developed and are developing in line with the principles espoused
in, for example, the European Convention on Human Rights and the E.C.
Treaty. It also highlights Irelands responsibility to contribute to the
international community with a proactive foreign policy on human rights.
Someone Like
You by Cathy Kelly
This new novel from the best-selling
author of Irish contemporary romance features Leonie, Emma and Hannah
- all want just one thing in life and then theyll be truly happy. For
Leonie, divorced 40-something mum-of-three, happiness means finding the
true love she ended her marriage for. For the insecure and just-married
Emma, it means escaping the control of her domineering family and conceiving
a longed-for child with her beloved husband. And for fiercely independent,
beautiful Hannah, happiness means money and security - something she doesnt
think any many can ever provide. But as these three very different women
discover, wanting something with all your heart and actually getting it
are two very different things. Because sometimes when you get it you may
discover its not what you wanted after all.
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Galloway Street:
Growing Up Irish in Scotland by John Boyle
John Boyle was born and raised in
Scotland but he could never feel Scottish. His parents were poor immigrants
from the west of Ireland who came to Scotland to find work and eventually
settled in Paisley, where John was the first of six children. This book
beautifully captures the poverty and the rough humour of the Boyle familys
life in the Paisley tenements, the songs and stories of their Irish Catholic
relatives and the often uneasy relationships with their Scottish Protestant
neighbours. It also shows how John is marked at the age of ten by an extended
stay with his spinster aunt on the remote island of Achill, as he begins
to understand the life his parents left behind. This is a book about exile
and belonging, about the poignancy of growing up Irish in Scotland, so
close to the place your mother still calls home. It is a truthful, funny
and moving evocation of a unique place and time, experienced through the
eyes of a child.
Special Relationships:
Britain, Ireland and the Northern Ireland Problem by Paul Arthur
Although recent events are testing
its durability, the Good Friday Agreement on 1998 has been hailed as a
triumph of Anglo-Irish diplomacy. But why did it take thirty years of
intense conflict to reach an understanding of the problem before a solution
could be implemented? In this ground-breaking book, centuries-old misperceptions
between the two islands are scrutinised and recent seismic shifts examined,
including the changing nature of Irish nationalism and the role of Irish-America
in both shaping and resolving the conflict. This is a wise and accessible
study by a distinguished observer, persuasively demonstrating how even
the most intractable conflicts can be made more malleable.
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Unionist Politics
and the Politics of Unionism Since the Anglo-Irish Agreement by Feargal
Cochrane
This book is a revised edition of
the first and still most comprehensive study of unionist politics since
the Anglo-Irish Agreement and sets out to explain the dynamics which underpin
contemporary unionist political behaviour. An understanding of the mindset,
fears, objectives of the largest political community in Northern Ireland
is crucial to any attempt to address and resolve the political conflict
in the region. The book concentrates on the period preceding the signing
of the Anglo-Irish Agreement of 15 November 19 through to the forum elections
and multi-party talks of July 1996. This revised edition contains a new
chapter that examines divisions within unionist politics during the negotiations
that led to the signing of the Good Friday Agreement. It looks in detail
at David Trimbles leadership of the Ulster Unionist Party and the difficulties
he has faced in selling the GFA within his party and within the wider
unionist electorate.
Irish Writing
in the Twentieth Century: A Reader edited by David Pierce
This reader offer a comprehensive
and pleasurable introduction to modern Irish literature in a single volume.
It contains over 400 pieces, including letters, diaries, newspaper and
journal articles, songs, poems, critical essays, literary profiles, entire
plays and short stories as well as extracts from novels and other longer
works. Texts which until now have been out of print or difficult to locate
are made easily accessible in this book. Arranged chronologically by decade,
from the 1890s to the 1990s, each decade is divided into two different
types of writing: critical/documentary and imaginative writing, and is
accompanied by a headnote which situates it thematically and chronologically.
The book is also structured for thematic study by listing all the pieces
included under a series of topic headings. The wide range of material
encompasses the writings of well-known figures in the Irish canon and
neglected writers alike.
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Historic Pubs
of Dublin by Aubrey Malone
with colour photos throughout Dublins
pubs are its defining experience as the most celebrated drinking city
in the world. Apart from being watering-holes, many were also once grocers,
borders, trading and meeting places. Others are the very stage on which
the drama of Irish history have been played out. The story of Dublins
pubs forms a social history of the city itself with a cast of hundreds.
Not just the famous either - Daniel OConnell, Charles Parnell, Michael
Collins, James Joyce, Flann OBrien, Brendan Behan - but the unsung heroes
of Dublin drinking culture too: legendary brewers, barmen, publicans and
drinkers. The author of this book takes the reader on an easy-to-follow
tour of the 60 finest historic bars Dublin city has to offer. With sections
on the city centre, Stephens Green, Temple Bar, North and South-side Dublin
and further afield, it is a practical guide for the visitor and Dubliner
alike. There are maps and specially-commissioned photography from Dublin-based
photographer Trevor Hart to bring the pubs gloriously to life.
Guide to Irish
Gardens by Shirley Lanigan
This book is the most comprehensive
guide ever to the gardens of Ireland. From tiny town gardens to the walled
gardens and sprawling acres of historic country houses, the author takes
the reader into every county of Ireland on a tour of over 300 gardens
which are open to the public. The gardeners share the secrets of their
success and give ideas for colour combination, low-maintenance plants,
unusual planting schemes, even for slug-control ducks! Explore the gardens
history, design, plant types and unusual features; locations - from sub-tropical
to seaside, wind-battered, boggy and rock-strewn; perfect lawns, topiarised
hedges, bluebell woods, sculpture trails, sensory gardens and potagers;
designs - from the minimalist to glorious riots of colour and scent. Whether
you are an avid garden visitor or an enthusiastic gardener in search of
inspiration, this is the book for you.
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The Irish Act
of Union by Patrick Geoghegan
The union of 1800-1801 created a single
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. It lasted until the Treaty
of 1922 gave birth to what is now the Republic of Ireland; it continues
to obtain Northern Ireland. The authors survey examines the passing of
the Act of Union in greater detail than ever before, drawing on newly
discovered secret service papers in the Public Record Office in London.
These papers settle the long-running controversy about government bribery
and the passing of the Act of Union. Geoghegans analysis shows beyond
a doubt that there was considerable bribery involved. He also connects
the passing of the Act of Union to the collapse of William Pitts ministry
in 1801. This is a connection never made before: it gives a depth and
context to this book that makes it stand apart.
Reading the
Irish Landscape by Frank Mitchell and Michael Ryan
This is the third revision of this
seminal work, first published in 1986. Co-authored by the original author
Frank Mitchell and now with Michael Ryan, the result is a stunning collaboration
between masters giving all the elements of the original book, modified,
updated and further enhanced by the inclusion of a new narrative of Irish
archaeology from the Stone Age to the Norman Invasion. Together they have
successfully undertaken the daunting task of giving in one book the story
of the shaping of the land from the beginning of time until the present,
by all the varying forces of nature, sea, climate, man and machine. The
story takes in the shaping of the crust, the movement of glaciers, the
first men and their primitive agriculture, the rise of the monasteries
of the Early Christians and the castles of conquest, the devastation of
war, urban growth, modern agriculture and afforestation, all set against
the backdrop of the landscape, arguably one of Irelands most precious
resources.
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Gardens of
Ireland: A Touring Guide to Over 100 of the Best Gardens by Terence Reeves-Smith
This book is for everyone who enjoys
visiting and touring gardens. In this book the author explores over 100
of the most beautiful Irish gardens, highlighting their most striking
features and revealing charming aspects that will delight every gardener.
From the imposing formal terraces of Powerscourt near Dublin to the mixed
planting of Glenveagh Castles pleasure garden set in the wild Donegal
landscape, this guide reveals breathtaking sights awaiting travellers
in Ireland. The book also includes at-a-glance symbols which denote garden
features and provide key facts for the visitor; maps which who the position
of every garden; highlights of nearby cultural sights of interest; and
exquisitely drawn three-dimensional garden plans.
Character Building:
A Guide for Parents and Teachers by David Isaacs
In this book the author, a prominent
Irish educationalist, offers ideas and suggestions on how parents and
teachers can help childrens all-round development. The emphasis is on
character building, approached from the viewpoint of moral habits. Professor
Isaacs takes twenty-four virtues and discusses how the child - at different
ages - can be encouraged to be obedient, industrious, sincere, prudent,
generous, optimistic, sociable and so on.
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Hungry for
Home: A Journey from the Edge of Ireland by Cole Moreton
This book tells the story of an Irish
island and the dramatic events that led to its being abandoned. The author
goes in search of the missing islanders, discovering a few survivors still
alive within sight of the Great Blasket. Following the footsteps of the
emigrants who had left half a century earlier, he seeks out the dead mans
brother and discovers an extraordinary end to their untold story. Driven
out of a home locked in the Middle Ages, the exiled islanders had crossed
the Atlantic and made a new life in the worlds most advanced nation.
This is a book about home and what it means, a voyage to America from
the edge of Ireland, and a gripping account of a quest for a vanished
people. But most of all it is the story of a family, the Kearneys, and
their breathtaking journey from one way of life to another.
The Other Side
of the Rainbow by Maire Brennan
Raised in County Donegal, Maire began
her musical career with family band, Clannad, a venture that has earned
her an array of hits, successful film scores and enviable collaborations
over the last twenty years. Along with her sister, Enya, and the other
members of Clannad, Maire has always fiercely guarded her privacy and,
although the personal life of this remarkable artist was material for
tabloid speculation in the early 1980s, she has valued the fact that her
private life has largely remained distinct from her public persona. Now,
with this compelling autobiography, she reveals her full story. The book
is both charming and harrowing, intriguing and inspiring. Much more than
a behind the scenes account of the rise of Clannad and Maire Brennan,
this book is a story of a talented Irish family, the excesses of fame,
the loss of self, and the hope of true love.
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