Related Subjects:
Author Index
Book reviews for "Gallagher,_Thomas_Michael" sorted by average review score:
Paddy's Lament: Ireland 1846-47
Published in Hardcover by Harcourt (1982)
Amazon base price: $4.98
Used price: $5.25
Collectible price: $7.00
Buy one from zShops for: $49.99
Used price: $5.25
Collectible price: $7.00
Buy one from zShops for: $49.99
Average review score:
Our Ancestors Lived Through This Horror?
Should be read by ALL history students!
This book is important for all of us to read. We must learn from our past, but how do we do this if we are kept in the dark about such history? Why were we not taught this in school? It is too important and in reading, I feel I am paying my respects, empathy, and honor to all those who suffered such a tragic period in Irish history.
Great Famine History In Here
It's sad that it is now out of print. I was able to get it here last year, just before the publisher stopped printing it. It is full of valuable information on famine facts, and, as a writer doing research for a novel, I especially found helpful the actual narrative accounts used in this book. Stories and facts passed on from famine survivors to their children and granchildren are used in this book, along with the author's smooth writing style. It is easy to read, and paints a vivid historical picture of this bleak period of Irish history.
Assault in Norway: Sabotaging the Nazi Nuclear Bomb
Published in Hardcover by G K Hall & Co (1975)
Amazon base price: $11.95
Used price: $6.95
Collectible price: $8.75
Used price: $6.95
Collectible price: $8.75
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Economic Impact Assessment of the International Standard for the Exchange of Product Model Data Step in Transportation Equipment Industries
Published in Paperback by DIANE Publishing Co (2003)
Amazon base price: $40.00
Average review score:
No reviews found.
The X-Craft Raid
Published in School & Library Binding by Harcourt (1971)
Amazon base price: $6.75
Used price: $1.75
Collectible price: $12.16
Used price: $1.75
Collectible price: $12.16
Average review score:
No reviews found.
Related Subjects: Author Index
Search Authors.BooksUnderReview.com
Reviews are from readers at Amazon.com. To add a review, follow the Amazon buy link above.
The economic setting of Ireland is laid out as that of an island of tenant farmers and large, often absentee, landlords. Agriculture produced wheat and beef for export to England. A small proportion of the land was planted in potatoes, the only food which could feed the population on such small acreage. With the advent of the textile industry in England, wool became a more profitable crop than the traditional ones, if only the native population could be done away with.
A fungus led to the destruction of the potato crop in 1846. Relief was available through the prohibition of the exportation of grain, a step which had previously been taken in other famine stricken countries. The control of Ireland's destiny was within the control of the British Lords who regarded the Irish as a subhuman species of which they would prefer to be rid. The aid extended by foreign nations, particularly the U.S., was a sharp indictment of British indifference. The Famine would not have occurred in a country in control of its own fate.
The famine cause tenants to fall behind in their rents. Massive evictions and destruction of homes followed. Many Irish were forced from their home villages to travel across the land. Is this why Mary McKeever's two brothers were born in the East, but she was born in the West?
Relief came in bits and spurts. The British Lords commissioned the chef of the Reform Club, their gathering place, to create an economical recipe for Irish soup kitchens. Emphasizing economy, he created a soup which was easy on the British exchequer, but provided little nutrition to the Irish. Did William Casey eat this greasy water?
The famine led to widespread starvation. The vivid description of the appearance of the victims is grotesque. Did Matthew Gallen's parents die this death?
Privation forced the Irish to abandon their homes in search of a new life beyond the hated British Empire. The practice of the American wake, in which the family mourned the loss of the son or daughter who was to leave forever was a heart rending affair for all involved. Many sought to avoid the wake by running away. Is this why Thomas English and his brother ran away from home?
The reader accompanies a group of immigrants on a voyage in the stinking, rocking, wretched steerage section of a British ship. The inferiority of the British ships as opposed to American is explained. The sailor's grim prediction that there would be more room the further out they got became hauntingly true. Again the details are presented in such detail as to turn the stomach of the readers even after all of these years. Is this the type of voyage on which Johanna Lynch chose a crewman for her husband?
A new life started for the survivors upon arrival in New York. The contrast between the lethargy of the Irish in Ireland and their industry in America spoke eloquently of the altered prospects for reward for their labors. Although many stayed in New York, others moved out to rural environments more reminiscent of Ireland. Is this how Patrick Nealon got to Bath, Maine?
The British realized that, as they ridded Ireland of its excess population, they were creating an America which was becoming Irish and anti-British. The failure of the potato crop was an act of God. The famine was an Act of Parliament. This perception turned the Irish dissatisfaction with the British into an intense hatred.
This book helps us understand our past and what made us they way we are.