Barefoot in Mullyneeny


Book Description




Barefoot in Mullyneeny: A Boy’s Journey Towards Belonging


Book Description

Bryan Gallagher's reminiscences of the Ireland of his youth, first heard on Radio 4's 'Home Truths', transport you to a world of boyhood pranks, playground politics and the confusion of growing up in a land that is every bit as magical and captivating as the stories he has to tell.




Barefoot in Mullyneeny : a Boy's Journey Towards Belonging


Book Description

Bryan Gallagher's reminiscences of the Ireland of his youth, first heard on Radio 4's 'Home Truths', transport you to a world of boyhood pranks, playground politics and the confusion of growing up in a land that is every bit as magical and captivating as the stories he has to tell.




Borderlines


Book Description

Out of his experience in Ballymenone, south of Enniskillen in the County Fermanagh, 'The Concept of Place' was a talk prepared by Henry Glassie for the Iron Mountain Literature Festival in Carrick on Shannon, County Leitrim, in 2017. It is presented here alongside the work of poet and playwright and director of the Iron Mountain Literature Festival, Vincent Woods.




The Stars of Ballymenone, New Edition


Book Description

In the time of the Troubles, when bombs blew through the night and soldiers prowled down the roads, Henry Glassie came to the Irish borderland to learn how country people endure through history. He settled into the farming community of Ballymenone, beside Lough Erne in the County Fermanagh, and listened to the old people. For a decade he heard and recorded the stories and songs in which they outlined their culture, recounted their history, and pictured their world. In their view, their world was one of love, defeat, and uncertainty, demanding the virtues of endurance: faith, bravery, and wit. Glassie's task in this book is to set the scene, to sketch the backdrop and clear the stage, so that Hugh Nolan and Michael Boyle, Peter Flanagan, Ellen Cutler, and their neighbors can tell their own tale, which explains their conditions and converts them into a tragedy of conflict and a comedy of the absurd. It gathers the saints and warriors, and celebrates the stars whose wit enabled endurance in days of violence and deprivation. With patience and respect, Glassie describes life in a time and a place exactly like no other, and yet Ballymenone is like a thousand other places where people work on the land during the day and tell their own tales at night, forgotten, while the men of power fill the newspapers and history books by sending poor boys out to be killed. The Stars of Ballymenone is an integrated analysis of the complete repertory of verbal art from a rural community where storytelling and singing of quality remained a part of daily life.







Barefoot in Hells Canyon


Book Description

In 1958 two teen-age boys acquire a war surplus raft in San Francisco, hop freight trains to Idaho where they've never been, and launch on the Snake River, intent on paddling hundreds of miles to its confluence with the Columbia River. Along the way: they upset, go hungry, hitchhike, meet farm families, invade small Idaho towns, and now and then write their worried parents. After capsizing and losing their shoes and meager food supply in remote Hells Canyon, they grapple with a comeuppance. Theirs is a saga of humor and history and survival and a friendship still intact after sixty years.




45 Minutes from Broadway


Book Description




Nigel Slater's Toast


Book Description

Based on the British Book Awards Biography of the Year, Toast is the story of Nigel Slater's childhood, told through the tastes and smells he grew up with. From making the perfect sherry trifle to waging a war over cakes and from the pressured playground politics of sweets to the rigid rules of restaurant dining, this is a story of love, loss and...toast.




Under Desert Sand


Book Description

In this fifth novel of the Zack Tolliver, FBI murder mystery series, Zack and Eagle Feather face a murder/suicide enacted as an old-fashioned western gunfight. It appears history is repeating itself in the exact same location...or does someone want them to think so?