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IRISH BOOKS

Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Richard Humble. By Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd. There are some available for $12.00.
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No comments about Saxon Kings (Kings & Queens).



Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Sheila Fletcher. By Hambledon & London. The regular list price is $35.95. Sells new for $11.96. There are some available for $4.99.
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No comments about Victorian Girls: Lord Lyttelton's Daughters.



Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

By Taylor & Francis. Sells new for $58.00. There are some available for $86.48.
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No comments about Physicists of Ireland: Passion and Precision.



Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Marie O'Neill. By Irish Academic Pr. The regular list price is $19.50. Sells new for $25.00. There are some available for $9.99.
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3 comments about Grace Gifford Plunkett and Irish Freedom: Tragic Bride of 1916 (Women in Irish History Series).
  1. Being a bit of a romantic, I was very curious about a woman who would marry a man the night before his execution. I wanted a number of questions answered: Why did she do it? Did she ever re-marry? What was life like for her after his death?

    The author does an excellent job of reporting the facts and offering opinions on how events in Grace Gifford Plunkett's life shaped who she was. After reading the book, I could answer all three questions, and the book satisfies at that level. Ms. O'Neill puts her subject in the context of the times, and she explains what is going on in Ireland at the time the events occur. In other words, the reader does not need to be intimately familiar with 20th century Irish history to enjoy this book. Grace Plunkett supported herself as an artist, and the author has the good sense to include these drawings in an attempt for the reader to understand the subject.

    Again, I am a bit of a romantic. The love story of Joseph Mary Plunkett and Grace Gifford never came alive to me during the book. Their story inspired the beautiful Irish ballad, "Grace," about that fateful night of the execution. Ms. O'Neill quotes from their love letters, and one sensed she could not get some important sources about this aspect of Grace Gifford Plunkett's life. After all, his death did occur 84 years ago.

    Nevertheless, the book is a good read, and it would probably make a decent, watchable movie.



  2. It is fitting that I first became aware of the tragic story of Grace Gifford Plunkett (1888-1955) when hearing the song "Grace" sung at an Irish pub in Savannah, GA called "Kevin Barry's." The pub was named for the Irish teenager and medical student who was executed by the British in 1920 and became a national hero. In fact, On the day of his execution, scores of his fellow students at all the Irish Universities joined the Irish Republican Army (IRA).

    I listened to the song "Grace" with tears in my eyes as her tragic story was revealed. As the fiancée of Joseph Mary Plunkett, a member of the IRA and one of the heroes of the 1916 Irish Rising, she married him just hours before he was executed. I couldn't get the haunting melody and lyrics out of my mind. The chorus goes, "Grace, just hold me in your arms and let this moment linger, For they take me out at dawn and I will die. With all my love, I place this wedding ring upon your finger, we won't have time to share our love for we must say goodbye." I had tears streaming down my face by the time the song was over.

    When I returned to Washington state, I couldn't wait to find out more about Grace. I was so glad to find this book of Marie O'Neill's which tells Grace's story. It's a short book, but packed full of details of Grace's life. It's illustrated with Grace's own cartoons. O'Neill interviewed people who had known Grace including nieces who shared many personal stories of their aunt.

    This book is recommended for anyone who would like more details of the 1916 Rising, told in a very personal way.



  3. By the light of two guttering candles in Kilmainham Gaol's Roman Catholic chapel, Grace Gifford married her fiance Joseph Mary Plunkett hours before his execution by firing squad. In doing so, Grace became forever linked with Ireland's struggle for independence, because her husband was one of the signatories of the Proclamation of Independence. So begins Marie O'Neill's biography of the woman who "became a powerful symbolic figure of the republican ideal for which her husband had given his life."

    Twenty-eight-year old Grace, the daughter of a Dublin solicitor, was second youngest in a family of twelve children. Born into a prosperous home, Grace and her siblings were surrounded with comforts, a wide circle of friends, and educational opportunities. Grace, a gifted artist, chose to study at the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art, then continued her studies in London, and finally returning to Dublin to begin a career as a caricaturist. A chance meeting with an Irish journalist in London introduced grace and her sisters to a broadening circle of friends, including the poet and painter known as AE, William Butler Yeats, Constance Markievicz, and Maude Gonne. The opening of St. Enda's brought them in contact with the future leaders of 1916.

    Raised a Protestant, Grace's increasing interest in her father's faith also led to a deepening friendship with Joseph Plunkett, whom she met at St. Enda's in late 1914 or early 1915. By winter 1915, the couple was secretly engaged and planned an Easter wedding following Grace's baptism into the Catholic faith. Through the War of Independence and the Civil War, Grace barely made ends meet. A lifelong Republican, Grace was never a member of Cumann na mBan, the women's auxiliary organization that worked to support the Volunteers. Still, she was arrested and served time in Kilmainham Gaol, along with other Republican women. After her release, Grace, who remained a widow for the rest of her life, struggled to make a living from her art. Many times she was reduced to poverty, and life only became easier after Eamon deValera and his party came into power and she received a civil list pension.

    Grace continued to draw, and her cartoons showed an incisive wit. Quiet and moody, she remained in Dublin, working until her health began to fail. She died in 1955, presumably from heart failure. She was accorded a funeral with full military honors.

    O'Neill's biography is a sensitive portrayal of a little known woman in a generation of extraordinary Irish men and women. Her history is important so the world can remember Grace Gifford Plunkett, a quiet woman whose immense talent and charm make her more than simply the "tragic bride of 1916."



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Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Alison Plowden. By Sutton Publishing. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $10.35. There are some available for $0.08.
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No comments about Elizabeth Regina.



Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Jacqueline Van Voris. By Feminist Press. There are some available for $1.69.
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1 comments about Constance de Markievicz - Her Fight for the Liberation of Ireland and Women (Feminist Press biography series) (Feminist Press biography series).
  1. Van Voris's biography of Constance Markievicz does an admirable job of attempting to bring this incredibly important and complex woman's life into focus. The book's fails somewhat in that it throws feminist theory and a late-1960s spin in to the mix, and the result is that it detracts from the fascinating story of Constance's life. If you are interested in the life of this remarkable woman, this book is not bad, especially if you read it in conjunction with the other fine biographies available. However, if you are looking to read one book on Contance's life, Anne Haverty's fine biography as well as Constance's own prison letters would be better sources.


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Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Noemie Emery. By Wiley. The regular list price is $25.95. Sells new for $2.00. There are some available for $0.01.
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No comments about Great Expectations: The Troubled Lives of Political Families.



Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Finley Peter Dunne. By Catholic Univ of Amer Pr. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $15.00. There are some available for $8.49.
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No comments about Mr. Dooley and the Chicago Irish: The Autobiography of a Nineteenth-Century Ethnic Group.



Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Blaine Taylor. By Boydell & Brewer. The regular list price is $14.95. Sells new for $78.41. There are some available for $19.99.
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No comments about Fascist Eagle: Italy's Air Marshal Italo Balbo.



Posted in Irish (Thursday, August 21, 2008)

Written by Chris Anderson. By Mainstream Publishing. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $23.98. There are some available for $17.21.
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4 comments about The Billy Boy: The Life and Death of LVF Leader Billy Wright.
  1. An account of how the man who brought the IRA to its knees in mid-Ulster was betrayed whilst in prison. An interesting read, although why the author got the ludicrously biased "Tim Pat Coogan" to write the intro is beyond me.


  2. The life and death of Billy "King Rat" Wright told for the 1st time in great detail.As a portadown loyalist he intimidated and bullyed his way around in the only way he knew. He died as he lived-by the gun at the hands of the INLA at the maze prison.
    A Great Read,well written and great to know this guy is off the streets for good. Questions remain though wheher or not there was state collusion in his death. Buy It.


  3. This book is an unfortunate attempt to justify the cowardly, and muderous actions of a notorious terrorist leader. The book also seems to be filled with misrepresented facts. The book details the rise of Billy "King Rat" Wright,who (after failing to defeat the superior forces of the IRA's East Tyrone, and North Armagh brigades) had to resort to killing scores of unarmed, innocent Catholic civillians.

    The book talks about how Billy Wright and the UVF, were forced to call a ceasefire in 1994, after a series of IRA assassinations of UVF leaders, left thier organization is disarray.

    Wright however, felt that the war against the IRA should go on, and in 1995, created his own UVF splinter faction called the LVF. After running the LVF for two years, Wright was put in prison for threatening to kill a Catholic woman. Upon entering prison he was immediately targeted for assassination by the IRA and INLA. Finnally in December of 1997, INLA commandos were able to ambush him inside a van in the prison courtyard, and shoot him to death. This book shows the life, death, and futile war that men like Billy Wright waged against a vastly superior foe...the IRA.



  4. This book is an unfortunate attempt to justify the cowardly, and muderous actions of a notorious terrorist leader. The book also seems to be filled with misrepresented facts. The book details the rise of Billy "King Rat" Wright,who (after failing to defeat the superior forces of the IRA's East Tyrone, and North Armagh brigades) had to resort to killing scores of unarmed, innocent Catholic civillians.
    The book talks about how Billy Wright and the UVF, were forced to call a ceasefire in 1994, after a series of IRA assassinations of UVF leaders, left thier organization is disarray.

    Wright however, felt that the war against the IRA should go on, and in 1995, created his own UVF splinter faction called the LVF. After running the LVF for two years, Wright was put in prison for threatening to kill a Catholic woman. Upon entering prison he was immediately targeted for assassination by the IRA and INLA. Finnally in December of 1997, INLA commandos were able to ambush him inside a van in the prison courtyard, and shoot him to death. This book shows the life, death, and futile war that men like Billy Wright waged against a vastly superior foe...the IRA.



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Saxon Kings (Kings & Queens)
Victorian Girls: Lord Lyttelton's Daughters
Physicists of Ireland: Passion and Precision
Grace Gifford Plunkett and Irish Freedom: Tragic Bride of 1916 (Women in Irish History Series)
Elizabeth Regina
Constance de Markievicz - Her Fight for the Liberation of Ireland and Women (Feminist Press biography series) (Feminist Press biography series)
Great Expectations: The Troubled Lives of Political Families
Mr. Dooley and the Chicago Irish: The Autobiography of a Nineteenth-Century Ethnic Group
Fascist Eagle: Italy's Air Marshal Italo Balbo
The Billy Boy: The Life and Death of LVF Leader Billy Wright

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Last updated: Thu Aug 21 08:37:34 EDT 2008