The first uniformed troops of the National Army appeared on the streets of Dublin in February 1922 as the IRA fractured along the fault lines of the Anglo-Irish Treaty.
Renowned brain hacker Keith Barry has spent his career mastering the science of hypnosis and sleep, aiding countless individuals in overcoming destructive sleep patterns while establishing new, beneficial habits. Now, he wants to help you.
Co-author of the bestselling ‘Irish Civil War in Colour’, with an exceptional track record for history books. A ground-breaking history which dispels myths and shows how most of the Spanish Armada survived. Tells the unknown story of the 24 Irish shipwrecks and the bloody slaughter of the Armada survivors.
Boland's ground-breaking essays and interviews, first collected in Object Lessons (2006), are enhanced by essays and major later writings addressing the changing nature of poetry, the poet, and Ireland.
Backalong, a dialect word from Nia Broomhall's native Somerset, describes any point in the past. Her impressive debut collection observes distant past and recent past through poems of place and origin as well as tracking the process of grieving for someone w ho was right there, not so long ago.
Edited by Francis Devine, Sarah-Anne Buckley & Olivier Coquelin, Retreat From Revolution 18 essays as well as four short biographies Liam O'Flaherty, Helena Molony, Patrick Hogan and Margaret Mc Coubrey, runs to 354 pages as well as a 24 page index by Charles Callan.
Ghosts of a Family is a riveting cold-case investigation that invokes the smoke-filled streets of Belfast during the cataclysmic violence of 1920–22, and explores how the ramifications of the McMahon killings are still being felt to this day.
Connections between the peoples of Ireland and Russia stretch back centuries, from the modern Post-Soviet period, through the turmoil of the twentieth century, and back deep into the foundations of the Romanov empire.