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PORTO LÚA
David Green
Boston-based writer, teacher and world traveler David Green has written a tour de force novel set in the Celtic region of Galicia during the latter half of the 20th century. Described as a coming-of-age novel, Porto Lúa introduces a country and people "living in a time before the disenchantment of the world, still engaging the mysteries of nature, of life and death, creatively without the explanations of modern science." Green is a masterful writer, and his descriptions of the story's windswept setting, between the sea, the mountains and the sky, is evocative and magical, evoking the rich prose of Gabriel García Márquez. He captures the pace of rural living in a way that often seems ethereal and spiritual. A senior lecturer at Boston University, where he teaches a popular course on writing, Green is an author and literary critic, whose other books are The Garden of Love and Other Stories (2010) and Atchley (1998). His special interests include Samuel Beckett and Modernism, and he has written scholarly articles on Beckett and Irish poet Brian Coffey.THE PROBLEM OF IMMIGRATION IN A SLAVEHOLDING REPUBLIC
Policing Mobility in the 19th-Century United States
Kevin Kenny
Professor Kenny has a distinguished academic career as a teacher, researcher and writer, with a specialty on migration, especially pertaining to Irish, Jews, Africans and Asians. His latest book offers an original interpretation of "how slavery shaped immigration policy as it moved from the local to the national level in the period from the American Revolution through the end of Reconstruction," according to his publisher. Massachusetts plays a central role in Kenny's research, especially in the mid-19th century, "where intense hostility to slavery coexisted with intense hostility to Irish immigrants. As the leading center of nativism as well as abolitionism, Massachusetts passed deportation laws to remove alien paupers alongside personal liberty laws to resist the return of fugitive slaves," Kenny writes. A professor of history at Boston College from 1998 to 2018, Kenny is currently professor of history at New York University and director of the Glucksman Ireland House in New York City. His previous books include Diaspora: A Very Short Introduction (2013); Peaceable Kingdom Lost (2009); The American Irish: A History (2000): and Making Sense of the Molly Maguires (1998).PERILS AND PROSPECTS OF A UNITED IRELAND
Padraig O'Malley
As a major voice on the topic of divided societies, from Northern Ireland to South Africa and the Middle East over the past half century, Padraig O'Malley's latest book is a welcome addition to the literature, especially now, when the prospect of a united Ireland seems closer than it has been in the last century. During the pandemic, O'Malley interviewed 97 political leaders, academics and political influencers, focusing on the Northern Ireland Protocol, the Good Friday Agreement, Brexit, Unionism and Nationalism, as well as the economics of reunification or continued partition, and the wide range of Northern Irish identities. Born and raised in Dublin, O'Malley emigrated to Boston in 1965 to pursue academics, and his focus was changed utterly by the Bloody Sunday massacre in Derry in 1969. Since then, he has become a foremost authority on Northern Ireland, while also playing an important role as a convenor of opposing parties to work out their differences. O'Malley is based at the McCormack Graduate School of Public Policy at University of Massachusetts in Boston, where he holds the Joe Moakley Chair of Peace and Reconciliation.THE GAELIC AND INDIAN ORIGINS OF
THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Diversity and Empire in the British Atlantic, 1688-1783
Samuel K. Fisher
The tension between the British Empire and American colonies that led to the American Revolution is getting a fresh look by historians as a lead-up to the 250th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence in 2026. Catholic University history professor Samuel K. Fisher's new book examines the roles of Indigenous natives, Irish Catholics and Scottish Highlanders during this period, who were courted by both the British troops and the colonial rebels, raising questions about the very concepts of individual rights, tyranny and liberty.CROSS BRONX
A Writing Life
Peter Quinn
Foreword by Dan Barry
ON EVERY TIDE
The Making and Remaking of the Irish World
Sean Connolly
On Every Tide explores not just Irish immigration to Boston and the United States but also to Britain and Canada, Australia and New Zealand, and South Africa and South America. It offers insights and anecdotes on what Irish Catholics had to overcome in the US, and how they overcame their victimized underclass status by leveraging the powers inherent in politics, religion, business, labor and culture. Connolly makes connections between anti-immigrant sentiment, starting with Know-Nothing nativism against the Famine Irish to modern day prejudice against Hispanic immigrants.Northern Ireland, the BBC, and
Censorship in Thatcher's Britain
Robert J. Savage
Focusing on the British broadcast media's coverage of the conflict in Northern Ireland throughout the 1980s, beginning with the Hunger Strike in 1981, Savage explores the "incessant wrangling between Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's government and an aggressive broadcast media determined to provide objective news and information about the complexities of 'the Troubles' to regional, national, and international audiences." He details the effects of Thatcher's "draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act" that sought to punish journalists for telling the truth, and the more insidious broadcasting ban that lasted for six years, effectively "silencing the voices of Irish republicans while tarnishing the reputation of the United Kingdom as a leading global democracy."Howdie-Skelp
Paul Muldoon
County Armagh's Paul Muldoon has distinguished himself as a daring, insightful, skillful poet, willing to fly into flights of fancy with alliterative cascades of language. The Princeton-based, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet is also a melodious lyricist who has written opera librettos and rock stanzas. Some years ago, Muldoon gave a joint reading with singer/songwriter Paul Simon at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston, where the similarities in their approach to crafting a perfect line was thrilling to hear. Muldoon's latest collection, Howdie- Skelp, continues the poet's audacious forays into whimsical and serious language with particular relevance to our time of COVID-19, bad manners, pop culture and historical episodes that need resolution. The phrase 'howdie-skelp' is "the slap in the face a mid-wife gives a newborn. It's a wakeup call. A call to action," according to the jacket notes, and for Muldoon, that's what his poetry is all about.In Kiltumper
Niall Williams with Christine Breen
A well-lived life is the best kind of life if it brings daily fulfillment and contentment. Married couple Williams and Breen have built such a life in rural Kiltumper, County Clare, Ireland, raising a family and building community, all the while tending a garden and writing books. The centerpiece of this marvelous book is their own Irish garden. For them, gardening is not a seasonal pastime, but a year-round, lifelong journey connecting them with the rhythm of country life, with nature itself. Their journal extracts reveal a spiritual reverence for planting, growing and harvesting, while Christine's black and white sketches of flowers and vegetables evoke the field work of early naturalists. Like other writers imbued by nature - Wendell Berry, Thomas Merton, Robert Frost and homesteaders Scott and Helen Nearing - the authors find joy in self-sufficiency and simplicity. It is indeed a well-lived life as portrayed by In Kiltumper.The First Kennedys
Neal Thompson
Readers are always eager for a new book on the Kennedys, especially one that chronicles the family's journey from impoverished immigrants to the pinnacle of power, wealth and achievement, exemplified by the presidency of John F. Kennedy. Neal Thompson's book The First Kennedys delivers a well-written, lively account of Patrick Kennedy and his wife Bridget Murphy, who arrived in Boston at the height of the Irish Famine in 1847. Throughout the anti-Irish 1850s, they moved from one East Boston tenement to another, trying to pay the rent. Patrick died in 1858, and it was his son P.J. Kennedy who made the leap from common laborer to businessman, buying a saloon in Haymarket Square then moving into banking. When P.J.'s son Joseph P. Kennedy finished Harvard, he married Rose Fitzgerald, a daughter of immigrants who also arrived here in 1847. John Fitzgerald Kennedy was their son, the start of their dynasty.IRISH NATIONALISTS IN BOSTON
Catholicism and Conflict, 1900-1928
Damien Murray
The evolving identity of the Boston Irish during the first quarter of the 20th century provides a fascinating backdrop for Damien Murray's book on Irish nationalism. Murray, an Associate Professor of History at Elms College in Chicopee, examines how Boston Irish identity was shaped by seismic events in Ireland like the 1916 Easter Rising and the campaign to form an Irish Republic after WWI. But Murray also uncovers the tensions on the ground within Boston's Irish community, pressured by Boston's Catholic Church, the local Anglo-American Ascendency known as Brahmins and the specter of socialism. Additionally, there were debates between physical force versus constitutional methods, and tensions between immigrant and working-class Irish, who tended to be more nationalistic, versus the establishment middle-class Boston Irish who had vested interests in assimilating into Boston's business community.THE UNSTOPPABLE IRISH
Songs and Integration of the New York Irish, 1783-1883
Dan Milner
Dan Milner's new book, The Unstoppable Irish traces the ascension of Irish Catholics in New York City through music over a full century, from post-Revolutionary War to post-Civil War. Folk songs, broadsides, songsters and sheet music form the thread for this evolution and lend insight into how the Irish were perceived and how they perceived themselves. Irish composers like Thomas Moore, Dion Boucicault and Edward Harrigan each have a role, along with music publisher Henry De Marsan, but a majority of the broadsides and street ballads Milner cites came from anonymous writers, often from working class tradesmen or soldiers. An accomplished folk scholar, teacher, collector and singer himself, Milner is an authority on Irish folk music in America and has produced several CDs that also include Civil War songs and sea songs.EXPELLING THE POOR
Atlantic Seaboard States & the 19th-Century Origins of American Immigration Policy
Hidetaka Hirota
The hordes of Irish immigrants who came to North America in the 19th century were more often paupers, traumatized by famine, disease, war and social injustice. Their transatlantic migration to eastern seaboard cities like Montreal, Boston, New York and Philadelphia is well documented. Less understood is how rampant anti-Irish nativism toward these immigrants had far-reaching effects on America's immigration policies. Professor Hirota, whose book began as a doctoral dissertation at Boston College under the direction of Professor Kevin Kenny, has produced a groundbreaking study of how anti-Irish regulations eventually led to restrictive federal regulations that helped shape immigration policy in the United States. Hirota reveals how states like New York and Massachusetts used colonial poor laws to not only exclude Irish immigrants, but to send them back to Ireland before they could get settled. // Oxford University Press | 320 pp / $37 / 2017Samuel Beckett is Closed
Michael Coffey
Author Michael Coffey has published a new book called Samuel Beckett is Closed. Written according to a sequence laid out by Beckett in his notes to the unpublished manuscript, "Long Observations of the Ray," Coffey's book is a mediation that shifts through numerous themes that range from a NY Mets Baseball game in 1964 to 9/11 and Guantanamo Bay. The LA Review of Books writes, "By breaking rules of genre and narrative, by embracing experimental form, Coffey's work raises questions about how contemporary artists might work to resist the status quo through a subversive, fragmentary style that makes it impossible for us to look away from our political reality." Formerly Managing Director of Publishers Weekly, Coffey is an accomplished poet, short story writer and non-fiction writer. He co-edited with Terry Golway the PBS-series book, The Irish in America, and authored a book called 27 Men Out: Baseball's Perfect Games.Bricklayer Bill
The Untold Story of the Workingman's Boston Marathon
Patrick L. Kennedy and Lawrence W. Kennedy
The Ordnance Survey and Modern Irish Literature
Cóilín Parsons
Literature and history are inextricably linked in Ireland. Wandering bards and minstrels, then novelists, essayists and poets, measured every inch of the Irish experience on this tiny island. Cóilín Parsons, English professor at Georgetown, examines ways in which Irish writers viewed the Ordnance Survey of Ireland, a massive 22 year public works project created in 1824 by the British government. In order to update land valuations and taxes, surveyors measured the entire island on a scale of 6" to a mile, offering a detailed scale of Ireland, from parish halls and barracks, stone walls and hidden vales. How Irish writers responded to the Ordnance Survey is the focus of Parsons' inquiry. He starts in the 19th century with John O'Donovan, George Petrie and James Clarence Mangan, then proceeds to John M. Synge, James Joyce and Samuel Beckett. Parsons ably tackles large topics, from literature, memory and modernism to colonialism mapmaking and historiography. He makes a compelling and well-wrought case that the Ordnance Survey proved to be "a defining point in the cultural history of Ireland."John William McCormack: A Political Biography
Garrison Nelson
John McCormack worked his way from South Boston’s housing projects to a leading figure in the U.S. Congress, winning 22 consecutive elections from 1928 to 1971. In 1962 he was elected the first Catholic Speaker of the House, serving nine consecutive years, a record later broken by his protégé Tip O’Neill.
Written by Garrison Nelson, Professor of Law, Politics & Political Behavior at the University of Vermont, this book is a masterpiece of research and writing. With a meticulous understanding of government machinations and political culture, Nelson charts McCormack’s career against the 21st century’s major events – from the New Deal to Pearl Harbor to the Kennedy assassination. Originally from Lynn, Massachusetts, Nelson also reveals a keen appreciation of the intricate, clannish Boston Irish, in all their ambition and spite. As such, McCormack stands as a major contributor to the literature of the Boston Irish.
Bloomsbury |
$40.00 HC | 928 pages | March 2017
Fault Lines in the Constitution: The Framers, Their Fights
and the Flaws that Affect Us Today
Cynthia Levinson and Sanford Levinson
Written for children and young adults, Fault Lines in the Constitution is a wonderful introduction to one of the world’s enduring documents. The husband-wife team features Professor Sanford Levinson, a Harvard Law constitutional scholar and his wife Cynthia, a well-known writer of children’s literature. Together they trace the origins of the document, and the process by which the framers of the constitution hashed out details in an atmosphere of heated debate, ongoing negotiations, and finally, a spirit of compromise. The main characters are fascinating historical figures – Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Madison, Franklin - who argue vigorously for their beliefs. There are sections on states' rights, presidential term limits, the electoral college, and the question of amending the constitution. A great book for young readers and adults too.
peachtree-online.com | $19.95 HC | 204 pages | April 2017
Her Name is Rose: A Novel
Christine Breen
Christine Breen has written a beautifully-rendered first novel that takes readers on an odyssey from Dublin and County Clare to Boston and New York and back. In 1990, an American girl studying in Dublin gets pregnant and gives up her baby Rose for adoption to an Irish couple who raise the child with love and devotion. Nineteen years later, circumstances force the mother to travel to Boston to track down the birth mother, unleashing secrets and regrets that lay dormant in everyone’s hearts. Boston readers will enjoy the evocative sketches of St. Botolph Street, concerts at Titus Sparrow Park and the Mapparium at the Christian Science Building. A long-time resident of County Clare herself, Breen perfectly captures the daily routines and inflections of the Irish countryside. Her characters - Irish and American alike – display a gentle wisdom in accepting the unforeseen twists and turns of life.
St. Martin's Griffin Press | $15.99 PB | 290 pages | April 2015
Everybody Matters: My Life Giving Voice
Mary Robinson, Former President of Ireland
Mary Robinson has been a voice of fairness, justice and change throughout her career. She is one of the most influential public figures in Ireland. As first female President of Ireland (1990-'97), she spoke forcibly for women’s contraception and equal rights. As UN High Commissioner for Human Rights ('97-2002), she brought worldwide attention to human rights violations around the world. Everybody Matters, embodies the principles and convictions that Robinson acted upon her entire life - challenging elitism, abuse of power and marginalization of vulnerable groups in society. Robinson describes making “115 trips to more than 70 countries during 5 years, almost always with the idea of helping to amplify the voices of victims, helping them feel that somebody was listening. It brought home to me the power of the act of bearing witness.” A frequent visitor to MA since her days at Harvard, Robinson has spoken strongly in Boston on behalf of undocumented Irish immigrants, for peace and justice in N. Ireland, and for victims of modern day famines due to war and climate change. // Bloomsbury US | $26 cloth |366 pages | March 2013 | ISBN: 978-0-8027-1801-3
The BBC’s ‘Irish Troubles’
Television, Conflict and Northern Ireland
Robert J. Savage
Rob Savage, professor of history at Boston College, has done extensive academic research on 20th century Irish politics and media. The BBC’s Irish Troubles, combines his expertise in both areas with a nuanced, detailed examination of the BBC’s role in reporting on Northern Ireland (NI) from 1968-'88. The story is replete with the bullying, favoritism, ineptitude and deceit practiced by British and NI officials. “Refusing to inform viewers fully of what was taking place in Northern Ireland,” the BBC coverage became dictated by “Government-imposed censorship, together with self-censorship practiced by anxious broadcasters.” The result was often a fabricated, self-serving narrative that did little to solve unrest. The heroes were a handful of intrepid reporters and news editors who tried to resist BBC censorship, as well as ordinary citizens who pressed for change. The final chapter, “Margaret Thatcher, the IRA and the Oxygen of Publicity” offers disturbing examples of how politicians sabotage the free press for political positioning. Relying on primary source material, Savage’s The BBC’s ‘Irish Troubles’ is an accomplished work of historical scholarship that contributes enormously to literature of NI.
Manchester University Press | $95 cloth / 288 pages / May 2015
The Ocean, the Bird and the Scholar:
Essays on Poets and Poetry
Helen Vendler
For those who cherish great literature and the writers who create it, Helen Vendler’s new collection of essays, book reviews and auto-biographical prose is a treasure. The Ocean, the Bird and the Scholar contains over two decades of thoughtful and exquisite interpretations of American writers like Walt Whitman, Wallace Stevens and Elizabeth Bishop as well as Irish writers like William B. Yeats and Seamus Heaney. She reveals to readers the profound value that literature offers to the human experience, and leaves us uplifted by poetry’s possibilities. The introductory essay that opens the book is inspiring. Raised in 1950s Boston in “an exaggeratedly observant Catholic household,” Helen Hennessy found her love of books from her parents, both teachers. But as a female, she was discouraged from pursuing literature, and instead studied chemistry. Eventually she made her way back, finding encouragement from teachers like John Kelleher, head of Harvard’s Celtic Studies Department, who she writes, “never forgot the link between literature and life.” Harvard University Press
$35 cloth / 464 pages / May 2015
Models for Movers: Irish Women's Emigration To America
Íde B. O’Carroll
Oral historian and writer Dr. Íde O’Carroll has conducted ground-breaking research on the lives of immigrant Irish women who came to the United States in the 1920s, 1950s and 1980s. Born in Ireland, O’Carroll lived in Boston in the 1980s, interviewing many of the women whose lives are chronicled here. She pays generous tribute to her mentors, such as the late Professor Ruth-Ann Harris, while providing a rich account of important figures in Boston’s Irish community like Sister Lena Deevy. First published by Attic Press in 1991, Cork University Press has issued this 25th anniversary edition of the book. A new Foreword by Dr. Breda Gray at University of Limerick, and an Introduction by O’Carroll, places the book in an historical context and underscores its enduring value. Currently a visiting scholar at the Glucksman Ireland House at NYU, O’Carroll divides her time between Amherst, Massachusetts and Lismore, County Waterford, Ireland.
Attic Press / $21 paper / 200 pages
Cork University Press July 2015
Tales from the Emerald Isle and Other Green Shores
Classic Irish Stories
Edited by Michael Quinlin
First published in 2005, this 10th anniversary edition includes 20 short stories and excerpts from a variety of master short story writers. In his Introduction, Michael Quinlin writes, “While other nations have cultivated visual arts, architecture or even cuisine to define their civilizations this race of storytellers has always used language to express the deepest dimension s of their cultural identity.” The writers in this volume include: Liam O'Flaherty, Arthur Conan Doyle, William Butler Yeats, Sarah Orne Jewett, George Moore, Frank Mathew, Samuel Lover, Bram Stoker, Katharine Tynan, Ellis N. Myles, Finley Peter Dunne, T. Crofton Croker, William Larminie, Lady Gregory, William M. Thackeray, Alexander Young, John McElgun, George A. Birmingham and Kate Douglas Wiggin.
Globe Pequot Press | An Imprint of Rowman & Littlefield
$14.95 paperback / $13.95 eBook / 280 pages / March 2015
The Business of Naming Things
Michael Coffey
Michael Coffey’s first collection of short stories is a masterpiece of exquisite writing and daring revelations. His characters are overwhelmed by their inherited circumstances, poor life choices and lingering regrets, which they somehow rally to accept with poise and even grim humor. Lonely priests, rakish cognoscenti, and troubled teenagers frequent the pages, but the best stories delve into the fragile, explosive relationships between fathers and sons, filled with hopes and failures. The final story, Finishing Ulysses, is a brilliant imaginative journey that recasts Joyce’s Dublin excursion into Philadelphia, with shades of William Kennedy’s novel, Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game. Set in post-war 1947, Bob Doherty and his pal Jimmy Curran race through Philly’s rainy nightlife, chasing shots of whiskey as trumpet great Clifford Brown blasts out Night in Tunisia. They are enraptured by the elusive poetry of life that is wrapped up in music, literature, adventure, and the seemingly infinite possibilities of youth.
Bellevue Literary Press
$15.95 paper / 208 pages / January 2015
Boston’s Cycling Craze 1880-1900
A Story of Race, Sport and Society
Lorenz J. Finison
This well-researched, well-written book traces the emergence of competitive and leisurely cycling, which was prompted by mass production of bicycles and the growth of sports in American life in the late 19th century. In Boston, African-Americans, Irish, Italians, Jews and old line New Englanders all took to the roads, strengthening ethnic and racial social ties while also competing against each other against a backdrop of immigration restrictions and fears. The Irish dimension is rich and well-researched, citing leaders like John Boyle O’Reilly and John “Honey Fitz” Fitzgerald, as well as the less famous champion cyclist Eddie McDuffee.
University of Massachusetts Press
$24.95 paperback / 312 pages / May 2014
Irish Americans
The History & Culture of a People
William E. Watson and Eugene J. Halus, Jr., Editors
A broad collection of Irish-American achievement, this volume is divided into four categories: Irish-American emigration; political and economic life; cultural and religious life; and literature, the arts, and popular culture. It strives to balance historical and contemporary figures. Many Boston Irish names are included: President John F. Kennedy, Ray Flynn, Conan O’Brien, Irish Micky Ward, Christa McAuliffe – while others are oddly missing: Senator Edward M. Kennedy, athlete James B. Connolly and writer George V. Higgins.
ABC-CLIO Publishers
$100 hardcover / 512 pages / March 2015
Wayfaring Strangers
The Musical Voyage from Scotland and Ulster to Appalachia
Fiona Ritchie and Doug Orr / Foreward: Dolly Parton
Wayfaring Strangers is a treasure of a book, a publishing delight. Readers will be enthralled with this well-conceived, well-written and well-produced history about how music from Scotland and Ulster got to America, and how it flourished by reinventing itself while staying true to its roots. The authors are passionate, knowledgeable and insightful about their topic. The book comes with a well-produced CD of twenty songs that complement the narrative. Among the musicians: Dolly Parton, Mairead Ni Mhaonaigh and Altan, Patrick Street, Len Graham, Pete Seger, Jean Ritchie, Doc Watson and Anais Mitchell.
University of North Carolina Press
$39.95 hardcover / 448 pages / 64 color and 60 b&w images
The Spinning Heart /
The Thing About December
Donal Ryan
Steerforth Press
$15 paper / 160 pages / 208 pages
An Irish Doctor in Peace and at War
Patrick Taylor
Author Dr. Patrick Taylor, born in Bangor County Down and now living in British Columbia, has written over a dozen popular novels that take place in the colorful Irish village Buckyballybo. It’s old time storytelling, where the characters share the joys, complications and sorrows of village life. In this tale, World War II brings Dr. Fingal Flahertie O’Reilly from Buckyballybo to the front lines, where he tends to the horrors of war and also seeks to stay true to his beloved Deirdre.
Tor/Forge Press
$24.95 hardcover / 420 pages
Rose Kennedy's Family Album:
From the Fitzgerald Kennedy Private Collection, 1878-1946
Foreward: Caroline Kennedy
Think of this exquisite coffee-table book literally as a family album, with photos, snippets from letters, humorous asides and personal reflections. But it’s a family album that chronicles one of America’s most famous families. The 300 plus photographs, overwhelmingly black & white, were lovingly saved and preserved by Rose, who in many ways kept the family narrative intact over so many decades.
Arranged and Edited by the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation
Hachette Books /
368 pages / $45.00 / October 2013
Machine Made: Tammany Hall and the Creation of
Modern American Politics
Terry Golway
Noted author, journalist and academic scholar Terry Golway has steadily built up a lasting literature on the Irish perspective and role in American history and politics. He is especially animated and astute when discussing his beloved New York, a topic immense and unwieldy like the city itself. Golway’s latest book, Machine Made, offers an engaging, insightful portrait of Tammany Hall, not as a den of iniquity and corruption, but as an ally to the immigrant classes pouring into New York City. Tammany helped the Irish, along with Italians, Jews and other newcomers, “feel like New Yorkers – and Americans,” giving them a sense of participation and connection that is missing today.
Liveright Publishing / W.W. Norton & Company / 372 pages / $27.95 cloth / March 2014
Who’s Your Paddy: Racial Expectations and the
Struggle for Irish American Identity
Jennifer Nugent Duffy
Who’s Your Paddy will cause controversy, disagreement and hopefully enlightened discussion, because the topics – whether racism is “a socially constructed response or an inherited trait?” as well as “the complexities of Irishness” – are timely and urgent.
Nugent Duffy is Assoc. Professor of History at Western CT State University, and the book is the result of research she did for her master’s degree. Her laboratory was Yonkers, NY, described as “a working class bridge between the towers of Manhattan to the south and the pampered hills of Westchester County to the north.” Duffy defines 3 categories of Irish for her research: assimilated Irish ethnics from the 19th century; Irish white flighters who emigrated to the Bronx in the 1950s but moved to Yonkers in the '70s; and new Irish immigrants who arrived in the early '90s.
New York University Press
/ 308 pages / $26.00 paperback / December 2013
Frog Music A Novel
Emma Donoghue
Dublin-born Emma Donoghue, now living in Canada, is an award-winning author of novels and short story collections that cover a range of topics, from convent school life in Ireland and emigration to lesbian fiction and historical novels. Her writing evokes a pleasant combination of Canadian short story master Alice Munro and Irish novelist Roddy Doyle. Her newest novel, Frog Music, is set in San Francisco in 1876, a perfect setting for Donoghue to explore the reckless, dangerous, Wild West era, when young women especially were susceptible to jealous men, arrogant millionaires and crime in the big city. The novel revolves around two women – French burlesque dancer Blanche Beunon, and mysterious, brave Jenny Bonnet – both trying to survive while finding stability, safety and perhaps even love in the process.
Little, Brown and Company / 408 pages / $27.00 cloth / April 2014
Strong Boy:
The Life & Times of
John L. Sullivan,
America’s First Sports Hero
Christopher Klein
Boston-born John L. Sullivan, the larger-than-life heavyweight boxer who dominated American sports lore in the late 19th century, had a fascinating life as a first generation Irish-American chasing the immigrant dream of success and fame. He achieved both, as author Christopher Klein recounts in this masterful, engaging biography of America’s first sports superstar.
Lyons Press / 356 pages / $27.50 / October 2013
Rogues and Redeemers:
When Politics was King in Irish Boston
Gerard O’Neill
The veteran Boston Globe reporter traces the domination of Irish-Americans in 20th century Boston politics. O’Neill’s scope goes from John “Honey Fitz” Fitzgerald, the first Irish-American mayor elected in 1906 to Ray Flynn, Boston mayor from 1984-93. Titans like James M. Curley, Kevin White and Bill Bulger are also covered, alongside a fascinating cast of minor characters who tried but never made it to the big stage.
Crown Publishing Group / March 2012 / $26
The Rising at Roxbury Crossing
James Redfearn
It is 1919, the year of the infamous Boston Police strike, and rookie cop Willie Dwyer is on the beat at Roxbury Crossing. Dwyer had fled Ballinasloe, Galway a decade earlier, after being caught up in Ireland’s rebellion, and here he is now upholding a civic order that is about to come crashing down.
Redfearn, a former Massachusetts State Trooper, understands the dialogue, customs and mindset of police and of Irish history. His fatherin- law, William E. Mulvey, was a police officer during the strike. Redfearn grew up in Roxbury when it was still an Irish enclave, and has a deft touch for the history of this special neighborhood.
The Rising at Roxbury Crossing introduces a writer with a sound sense of pace, dialogue, drama and insight into history that makes this debut novel so enjoyable to read.
Olde Stoney Brook Publishing / 2012 / 425 pages / $18.95
The O’Briens:
A Novel
Peter Behrens
Canadian author Peter Behrens has written an epic tale of a sprawling Irish family in 20th century America that starts in Quebec and ends in California. Along the way family ambition, betrayal, madness and violence are all examined by beautiful prose and great insight. Publishers Weekly called The O’Briens a work of ‘rough beauty.’
Pantheon Books / March 2012 / $25.95
Cheffin: From Potatoes to Cavier
Brendan Cronin
Irish Master Chef Brendan Cronin has published his first book, Cheffin: From Potatoes to Cavier. It’s a lively, engaging story that begins on a small dairy farm and ends in the finest hotels and restaurants in the world.
Cronin, who teaches hospitality management at Endicott College, attained the prestigious Swiss Culinary title of Chef de Cuisine Diplomé. He provides behind-the-scenes stories about what it takes to become a professional chef in this competitive environment, which took him to some of the world’s finest five-star hotels and restaurants in Europe, Africa and the Far East. The book includes many of Cronin’s own recipes, presented with that same perfection and care that marks Chef Cronin’s illustrious career.
Amazon.com / March 2012
The Emerald Diamond:
How the Irish Transformed America’s Greatest Pastime
Charley Rosen
Veteran sports writer and author Charley Rosen has pulled together a light-hearted, anecdotal narrative of how Irish-American baseball players shaped the early days of baseball. Some of the best players and most outlandish characters have local connections, like Mike King Kelly, the game’s first superstar, and Connie Mack (Cornelius McGilllicuddy), born in East Brookfield, MA.Harper Colllins / February 2012 / $25.99
JFK in Ireland:
Four Days that Changed a President
Ryan Tubridy
Irish journalist Ryan Tubridy tells the fascinating story of President Kennedy’s famous trip to Ireland in June 1963, which transformed both the president and the Irish people. The book is beautifully designed and printed, which is an extra bonus as a keepsake item. It’s available at the JFK Library gift shop in Boston.Lyons Press / November 2011 / $27.50
Three Letters to Pine River
Harold Griffin
This fascinating novel, based on a true story, tells the story of 14 year old Francis Carroll, who overhears a violent confrontation between two farmers – Connors and Ferrigan - that ends in one of them being murdered with an ax. The setting for the novel is a close-knit Canadian-Irish farming settlement north of Quebec City. Francis must testify in court and the whole ordeal has a tragic impact on the community, who are divided between the families of the bereaved and the accused.Borealis Press / October 2011 / 296 pages / $19.95
A Warrior’s Heart:
The True Story of Life Before and After the Fighter
Micky Ward
In putting down on paper the story of his hardscrabble life, Lowell boxer Micky Ward tells a tale of glorious victories punctuated by heart-breaking defeats, both in and out of the ring. It’s a story that could have ended badly, but it did not, thanks to the tremendous courage and character that is revealed in this autobiography.Jack Kennedy: Elusive Hero
Chris Matthews
Political pundit and talk show host Chris Matthews has written an engaging biography of John F. Kennedy. Widely known as a gabber, Matthew is also a gifted writer and story-teller, perhaps inspired by his old boss, Tip O’Neill.Jacqueline Kennedy:
Historic Conversations on Life with John F. Kennedy
Foreword by Caroline Kennedy
Within months of President John F. Kennedy death, Robert F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy agreed to proceed with a scheduled oral history project to give future generations a glimpse of President Kennedy and his White House years. The seven interviews with Mrs. Kennedy, which began in March 1964, were conducted by noted historian Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., and they provide a candid, insightful and loving look into the Kennedy years at the White House.Hyperion Publishers / September 2011 / $60.00
The Greater Journey:
Americans in Paris
David McCullough
American historian David McCullough has written a compelling story about Americans who moved to Paris, France in the 19th century, seeking inspiration and experience in one of the world’s great cities. They included Oliver Wendell Holmes, Charles Sumner and Harriet Beecher Stowe.Simon & Schuster / May 2011 / $37.50
Brady’s Civil War: - A Collection of Memorable Civil War Images
Webb Garrison
When the Civil War erupted in 1861, Matthew Brady, already an acclaimed New York photographer, wrote to President Abraham Lincoln and received permission to photograph the entire war. Along with his assistants Timothy O’Sullivan, Alexander Gardner, and others, Brady spent four years in the rough and ready camps and battlegrounds, documenting the fighting and the grim aftermath. This coffee-table gift book has beautiful renditions of photographs from Brady’s studio and an intelligent narrative by Civil War expert Webb Garrison.
Globe Pequot Press / March 2011 / $24.95