Ireland Books


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Ireland Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Ireland
A Provisional Dictator: James Stephens and the Fenian Movement
Published in Paperback by University College Dublin Press (2007-10-15)
Author: Marta Ramon
List price: $54.95
New price: $31.11
Used price: $73.49

Average review score:

Great Research! Great Read!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-28
Ms. Ramon's diligent research has shaped a highly complete biography of James Stephens, the founder of the IRB--the Irish Republican Brotherhood. Her exploration of Stephen's relationship to the American Fenian Brotherhood of America is cogent. Stephen's was a very complex man, yet Ms. Ramon dug out all facets of his personality in a lively style. Her book will not be matched in our lifetime. Some scholar must take on the task of providing us with great biographies of Michael Doheny and John O'Mahoney to close the Fenian ring.Highly Recommended!

A Provisional Dictator
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-31
The Fenian movement consisted of two linked Irish nationalist organizations, one centered in Ireland and the other in the United States. Fenianism was an outgrowth of the Young Ireland Rising of 1848. Many participants of that rising escaped from the British dragnet that followed to settle in France and America. It took ten years for these men to reassemble their forces again. In 1858 Young Irelanders, now old, under Michael Doheny and John O'Mahony living in the United States, signed up James Stephens to organize an army in Ireland to challenge the British right to rule. O'Mahony and his organization in the US promised military men to lead and to provide arms for a new Irish rising. Stephens did a masterful job of organizing Irishmen in Ireland into a secret society known as the Irish Republican Brotherhood or IRB. Unfortunately his organizing powers were much better than his ability to coordinate the hard decision to fight in 1865 and Stephens was written off as a vacillating failure by many nationalists. Desmond Ryan, an admirer of Stephens, wrote his biography (The Fenian Chief - published posthumously 1967) but it is outdated and lacks research material uncovered by Ramon and others in recent years. Ramon's biography brings scholarly research up to date on Stephens and details his life and his contribution to the Fenian movement. The book is very readable, meticulously footnoted and provides, at last, a scholarly biography of the supreme organizer of physical force nationalism in Ireland. Ramon's biography examines Stephens' character and offers well-thought out discussion concerning the motives for Stephens often criticized actions as the Chief of the Irish Revolutionary Brotherhood. In addition to facts not before revealed of Stephens' life, this book is written with an objective clarity that is lacking in the Desmond Ryan's account. Ramon explains in a coherent manner the complex nature of Irish physical force nationalism, from its formation out of the failure of Young Ireland through the turbulent years 1865-1878. The Fenians laid the groundwork for the eventual independence of the Irish Republic that arose out of the 1916 Easter Rising. This book should not be missed by those interested in Irish and Irish-American history. A great biography of a man who altered the historical path of Irish history.

First-rate
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-26
Required reading for anyone interested in the fascinating history of the Fenian movement. This will be the authoritative Stephens biography for some time to come. It is thorough, precise, enormously detailed, and altogether entertaining at the same time.

Ireland
A Reader's Guide to William Butler Yeats
Published in Hardcover by Octagon Books (1983-05)
Author: John Unterecker
List price: $22.50
New price: $61.17
Used price: $11.97
Collectible price: $48.88

Average review score:

Guide of Choice
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-26
Unterecker's "Reader's Guide," a vade mecum for the apprentice
or seasoned reader, informs and instructs. As commentary or teaching tool, it advances a concise, systematic way to interpret the ideas, literary devices, images, symbols, and occult motifs that permeate Yeats's poetry, a thematic
analysis that connects one poem with another and reveals the visionary design at the center of Yeats's work. From the allegorical quest in "The Wanderings of Oisin" to the meditative panorama of "Under Ben Bulben," Unterecker explicates the motifs of Yeats's evolving mythology of a unified self.

Good book
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-20
In terms of understanding the writings of WB Yeats, this book is a must. It provides insights into otherwised missed subtleties that allows for a greater appreciation of the work of a great artist. (I use the diction of great artist because this truely describes his work). Anyway, this book is well written and recommended by myself.

Latchkey to Yeats
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-26
Unterecker's "Reader's Guide," a vade mecum for the novice or seasoned reader, informs and instructs. As commentary or teaching tool, it advances a concise, systematic way to interpret the ideas, literary devices, images, symbols, and occult motifs that permeate Yeats's poetry, a thematic analysis that connects one poem with another and reveals the visionary design at the center of Yeats's work. From the allegorical quest in "The Wanderings of Oisin" to the meditative panorama of "Under Ben Bulben," Unterecker explicates the motifs of Yeats's evolving mythology of a unified self.

Ireland
Rebecca's Flame
Published in Paperback by Roussan Publishers (1999-11-01)
Author: Lynne Kositsky
List price: $5.95
Used price: $0.38

Average review score:

An excellent follow on to Candles
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-20
Compulsive reading, author has an incredible way of making history come alive for young people.

Daring Subject Matter!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-24
Lynne Kositsky tackled difficult subject matter in Rebecca's Flame -- and pulled it off in a way that is memorable and compelling. The controversial subject matter of the romance between Rebecca and Sean is sure to raise some eyebrows, but even though the novel is set in the 1800's, this is still a current issue in the Jewish community. Rebecca's decision on how to handle the situation is surprising and ultimately calls into question issues of faith and love.

Great book, great author!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-10
I absolutely loved Rebecca's flame. I was irresistibly drawn in within the first ten pages, and I had the worst time putting it down. I just had to know what happened next. I thought that the characters weren't as well developed, in general, as in her other book, Candles, but I loved the character of Sean. Many characters, so-called "love interests" are not as well developed as the main character, but I got a real sense that Sean was a real person. Just like last time, Lynne Kositsky hits the nail on the head!

Ireland
Res Gestae Christiani: My Time as the President of the Cambridge University Korean Society 2002-2003
Published in Paperback by The Hermit Kingdom Press (2006-06-25)
Author: Christian Kim
List price: $17.99
New price: $10.99
Used price: $5.84

Average review score:

Needed book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-20
There is a lot of racism against Korean's in Cambridge University. Most of this racism seems to emanate from French students, who appear to have an irrational hatred of Korean's. A good example would be when a group of Korean's came to my College bar to watch South Korea play against France in the World Cup. The Korean's were told repeatedly to shut up by a group of French students whenever they cheered for South Korea (known as the red devils). The French students were very aggressive towards the Korean's, especially after Park Ji Sung scored the equalizer. I hope that France gets knocked out of the World Cup in the group stage.

It is a shame that Christian Kim was asked to leave Cambridge since he did a lot of good work as president of the Cambridge University Korean Society. Racist attacks against Korean's fell during Christian Kim's presidency, however they are now on the rise. I feel that this is a very important book in the fight against anti-Korean racism. All korean's in Cambridge need to read this book.

Great Anticipation!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-08
I have been looking forward to reading this book by Christian Kim. I have read his other books and find them quite impressive. He is insightful and understands social dynamics of today. I would recommend all books by Christian Kim.

A Leader in the Korean Community
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-08
This book written by one of the prominent leaders of the Korean community is great! Koreans have been struggling for many years to empower ourselves and it's great that there is a person out there who is willing to sacrifice himself to empower Koreans.

Ireland
The Ring of Truth
Published in Paperback by Holiday House (1999-10)
Author: Teresa Bateman
List price: $6.95
New price: $327.62
Used price: $3.00

Average review score:

An entertaining and delightful Irish tale
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-07
Teresa Bateman's Ring Of Truth is simply wonderful! I enjoyed reading this wild tale of "true" blarney. Delightful and entertaining---A great read.

A brilliant fairytale!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-07-01
Rich, complex and gorgeous illustrations provide the perfect compliment to the story of the braggart Patrick who is tricked by the Leprechaun King and must now tell only the truth. Obviously, this will be a decided disadvantage in the Blarney contest in which he is entered. Or will it? A thoroughly enjoyable tale which has the familiar feel of a truly great fairytale for the ages.

believe in the little people
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-20
"Patrick O'Kelly was a peddler of scarves and trinkets, with a habit of telling magnificent lies." So begins "The Ring of Truth". "Magnificent" may even be an understatement for him. He is supposed to have kissed the Blarney Stone once, that fabled and mystical rock that gives one the gift of gab, and by the way he carries on, it's believed that he managed to get a bit of that rock stuck in his teeth! He is such a fine artist of Blarney, that he easily boasts that he could out-fib the very king of the Leprechauns himself!!

Well, as any good Irish legend will tell you, be careful about what you say about the Fair Folk, for they have great ears for hearing and egos to boot!! It's hardly long before Patrick O'Kelly is swept off to the very land of the Faeries to meet the king of the leprechauns himself!

Like any fine Celtic tale, the book is full of twists and turns and play on words, of which the title of the book is just one (I'll not give away the ending for fear of spoiling the fun for readers!). The ending is a fun surprise for readers, as well as for our brave hero, Patrick O'K. Himself! What will stick to readers' ribs most, however, are the illustrations.

Illustrated by Omar Rayyan, the book resembles now an illuminated manuscript, now a surrealistic painting. Faeries and other Fair Folk are mischievous creatures, to say the least, and to step into their world, however briefly, is to take a roller coaster ride into the ethereal and strange. Winged sprites flit too and fro, and the King has always about him a smile that is first playful and fun, and upon closer inspection, hinting at some darker purpose. Once Patrick has gone to their fair land, they are all about him, hiding here and there, yet the reader knows that they are invisible to everyone-another example of that mischievous, almost sinister magic they weave.

All in all, a tremendous book and perhaps too overlooked in the children's section. Though Irish in nature, it is not about St. Patrick's day, so there is no need to keep it mothballed until then! Bring out this treasure of a story and illustration and read it often!!

Ireland
Russian Air Power
Published in Hardcover by Motorbooks International (2002-07)
Authors: Yefim Gordon and Alan Dawes
List price: $39.95
New price: $40.27
Used price: $26.47

Average review score:

Better than Popular Mechanics
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-06
Essentailly, this book provides great analysis on the current state of the Russian Airforce. Since the fall of Communism in 1990, the country has gone into an extreme debt. Due to that debt the Russian Airfoce has been forced to endure extreme budget cuts and upgrades to existing aircraft. Most development programs are now only research and development for scientific purposes. Many of the more advanced aircraft such as the Mig 1.42, S-37a or SU-47, and SU-37 will never see combat service. The history behind these planes, however, is fantastic. Huge recommendation for any Cold War fans. This is way better than Popular Mechanics on individual jets.

A most interesting read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-01
This book represents a remarkably successful attempt to present the aviation elements of the numerous branches of the Russian armed forces and their equipment. Although detailed accounts of the latest Russian aircraft have been available for years, this lavishly illustrated volume succeeds in presenting these impressive aeronautical achievements in the context of the operational requirements and national strategy of Russia. Tactics and weapons are thoroughly discussed and major shortcomings, especially in training and maintanance are dealt with as well. The organisations themselves are presented in some detail; however, the reader who expects a detailed "order of battle" of these organisations will be disappointed.
The outstanding achievement of this volume is that it combines the russian perspective on airpower with some unknown aspects of Russian operations, e.g. Russian army UAVs, the two Chechen campaigns as well as fascinating future developements.

The Russian Air Force: From the Inside
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-04
Yefim Gordon is one of the top aviatian journalists in the world today, especially in regards to Soviet and Russian aircraft and designs. Being Russian, he offers an insider's view on the history, design, manufacture, and development of all major Soviet/Russian aircraft programs. Together with co-author Alan Dawes, Gordon has created the ultimate study of the modern Russian Air Force. The book analyzes and details the various air forces from the Soviet Union (Long Range Aviation, Frontal Aviation, Transport, Air Defense, Naval,etc) to today and gives an up-to-date breakdown on the current usage including squadrons, aircraft types, and airbases.

Lavish with full color pictures and rich with detail from an insider's perspective, Russian Air Power is a must have for any aviation enthusiast and well worth the money.

Ireland
The Sacred Isle: Belief and Religion in Pre-Christian Ireland
Published in Paperback by Boydell Press (2001-10-04)
Author: Dáithí O hOgain
List price: $27.95
Used price: $59.99

Average review score:

WOW! A stunning work that every Celt/Irish nut will want!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-05
O'Hogain has done it again, by providing another invaluable resource for those interested in learning more about Celtic and Irish pre-christian religion. Very well-researched and written, this book will take you on a journey back in time, which you'll never forget! Don't miss his other works either.

Yes!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-01
Excellent! Very blunt, well put, and provides the information in a way that is no nonsense, straight way. Loved it.

Very thorough and scholarly
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-16
This is a definitive work on the subject. The author surpasses credible to the level of genuine expert. I feel safe in trusting his research and speculations. Being a scholarly work, the book isn't for the faint of heart (it can be thick reading at times), but if your into Celtic studies, the history of Ireland, the history of the Druids, then this book is a must and should be read and referred to again and again. The author uses a wonderful blend of archaeology, literature, and mythology not only of Ireland, but also from a vast range of sources. He ties in accounts of the Continental Celts, the Indo-Europeans, the Greek and Roman sources, and even accounts from India (Vedic, rig Veda, etc). The author gives us a complete picture that is supported by a myriad of sources and language associations. The only thing that I felt could have enhanced the book would be an index. Very great work, well worth the money.

Ireland
Salisbury: Victorian Titan (Phoenix Press)
Published in Paperback by Phoenix Press (2006-10-30)
Author: Andrew Roberts
List price: $19.95
New price: $54.60
Used price: $19.84

Average review score:

Salisbury: Big Book, Big Subject, Big Author
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-29
This is not just a book of immense intrinsic value. It's a book of real historical importance as one of two biographies of Salisbury published recently which entirely reassess his standing as one of the leading English statemen of the latter part of the nineteenth century, ranking alongside Gladstone and Disraeli.

It seems incredible in view of the plethora of studies on Gladstone and Disraeli that it's been half a century since any historian has made a full-scale re-evaluation of the life of Robert Cecil, third Marquess of Salisbury, three-times Prime Minister and architect of Queen Victoria's glittering Empire.

And yet he was a man arguably of greater intellect than either of these two other late Victorian "giants". Disraeli wrote rather affected, stylized novels; Gladstone turned out unreadable religious tracts. Salisbury, on the other hand, produced stimulating and pithy articles in the Saturday and Quarterly Reviews and delivered parliamentary speeches at least as memorable as those of the other two statesmen.

But few historians have really come to grips with Salisbury in recent times. One had to look into Barbara Tuchman's epic "The Proud Tower" to find a chapter that did justice to the colorful, quirky patrician figure who performed sometimes dangerous chemical experiments in his spare time, was one of the first to introduce electricity into his home, rode around on an enormous tricycle and who was always ready to chat to strangers, even lunatics.

Perhaps historians have been too ready to downgrade Salisbury's standing because of his inherent conservatism in the domestic field, his endeavors to preserve the status quo. And as to his being a main architect of Empire, this all-too-readily clashes with the modern, probably justified aversion to that theme.

This book was commissioned by the present Marquess of Salisbury. It says a lot about the open-mindedness of the Cecil family that historian Andrew Roberts was given the task. Anyone who has read his wonderfully debunking "Eminent Churchillians" knows Roberts as an historian of the utmost integrity, incapable of pulling punches. And he pulls none in his biography of Salisbury, whom he paints on a broad canvass, "warts and all". But Roberts's admiration and affection for his subject is never in doubt. The result is a big book about a very big statesman by a young, big, historian.

The Queen's Last Minister
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-08
Victoria and Salibury; two true Titans who, the former, giving her name to the century, and the latter, who helped create the formidable empire which was both reviled and regaled. This book is in the great tradition of "Life and Times" biographies. Mr. Roberts is to be commended for the scope and structure of slowly but with anticipation revealing the aspects of a fascinating man. The chapters on the Boer War and the Realpolitik diplomacy of the African continent are just two elements that should be read for years to come. From a shy and bookish child to the political standard bearer of the Tory Party, this book shows a man with conviction, often callous to some but with foresight which comes through in the epigrammatical style of Salisbury's prose. Thank You Andrew Roberts for your wonderful book.

Superb biography of ruthless Empire-builder
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-31
Andrew Roberts has produced a superbly written and wonderfully exciting biography of Lord Salisbury, three times Queen Victoria's Prime Minister. In his fifty-year career, Salisbury won over Disraeli, destroyed Lord Randolph Churchill, charmed Queen Victoria, wrecked Gladstone's hopes for Irish Home Rule, and saw off Bismarck. The book is based on Salisbury's archive at Hatfield House, and on the papers of more than 140 of his contemporaries.

Roberts records Salisbury's many contradictions. He supported "the right of a minority of Americans to secede from a Union, but not a majority of Irishmen." He opposed socialism as mere confiscation, but upheld the actions of his ancestor, the First Earl, who had confiscated much of Ulster's land between 1607 and 1609, then selling it to City and Scottish businessmen.

He wrote eloquently against intervention in other countries' domestic affairs. "The Assemblies that meet at Westminster have no jurisdiction over the affairs of other nations. Neither they nor the Executive, except in plain defiance of international law, can interfere with the brigandage of Italy, or the persecutions in Spain, or the teachings of the schools in Schleswig-Holstein. What is said in either House about them is simply impertinence ... It is not a dignified position for a Great Power to occupy, to be pointed out as the busybody of Christendom." And, "there is no practice which the experience of nations more uniformly condemns, and none which governments more consistently pursue."

Indeed, his Governments annually waged colonial wars in Asia and Africa, adding 2.5 million square miles and 44 million people to the Empire. His war against the Boers was particularly shameful: he claimed that Britain had sovereignty over the Transvaal, although the British Government had ceded this in the 1884 Pretoria Convention. (Roberts grants that Salisbury was `on exceedingly tricky ground legally'.) As Salisbury admitted, "If our ancestors had cared for the rights of other peoples, the British Empire would never have been made."

Ireland
Scotland's Story (Yesterday's Classics)
Published in Paperback by Yesterday's Classics (2005-12-19)
Author: H. E. Marshall
List price: $17.95
New price: $17.95
Used price: $21.94

Average review score:

Inspiring children's history
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-27
I picked up Scotland's Story because I loved Marshall's Our Island Story (about Britain) so much. Like that history, Scotland's Story is a personality-centric history: Each chapter tells the unfolding tale of Scotland through an episode (real or legendary; Marshall always indicates when something is not precisely factual) in the life of a famous Scot. There is just enough fact to educate and just enough fantasy to entice a young mind.

One important caveat: The story of Scotland--and every other nation, no doubt--is rarely one of sweetness and light. This is a story of one battle and war and imprisonment after another. Nevertheless, Marshall never forgets her audience, the upper elementary-aged child (although my 4-year-old has thoroughly enjoyed both Our Island Story and Scotland's Story, with occasional on-the-fly editing from Mommy). Another top pick: Naxos Audiobooks' unabridged Our Island Story on audio CD, surprisingly one of my daughter's favorite listens.

One of the Best Read-Alouds
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-08
Scotland's Story is simply wonderful! It's an old classic that's finally available again at a reasonable price. Marshall writes for children, and my K- and 2nd grader have loved these stories, but I've been equally enthralled. She begins with legends of the earliest Scots, and becomes more authoritative as she gains the ground of documented events. Read about Macbeth and Macduff, Malcolm Canmore, the beloved William Wallace, Robert the Bruce, all the Jameses, Mary-Queen of Scots, and on up through their Union to England, the last of the Stewarts (a line birthed with a wonderful tale in the early part of the book), and into the 19th century a bit. The chapters are not especially long, but even so are broken up into short sections for quick, easy read-alouds. We're ordering this book, as renewing it from the library is getting tiresome....and it's one we want to add to our library!

Puts the "story" back into "history"!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-27
This delightful book recounts the history of Scotland in language simple enough for a child to understand and appreciate, yet colourful and detailed enough to provide an accurate and comprehensive treatment of this vast subject. It transports the reader to another world, of mighty rulers, daring knights and heroic princes. It is so riveting that I read it three times in a row when I was seven, and remember it fondly to this day...

Ireland
Sea Otters 2007
Published in Hardcover by Browntrout Pubs (Cal) (2006-12-01)
Author:
List price:

Average review score:

It's like being there right next to them
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-17
The annual Otter Calendar by Georgienne Bradley and Jay Ireland puts you right "where the action is". I have dove in Northern California with sea otters in the oast and these images bring back all those memories of the playful otters. The photography, of course, is awesome. This calendar graces my wall every year. And it depicts just one of the many offerings the oceans have in store for us. You are missing a lot if you don;t have these cute creatures greeting you "Good morning" every day!

Otterly divine
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
This is a wonderful calendar and shows the little critters to their best advantages.

coalas aren't even close
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-05
Never could understand why coalas are considered the cutest animals around. Obviously, those who said so never saw sea otters. Another otter's advantage is that their IQ (compared to that of a coala) is about 200+.
Great photos, funny and cute animals - every page makes you smile when you look at it and want to know more about those wonderful creatures.
I had a sea otter calendare several years ago and was glad when I found this one so I could put them on the wall again.


Books-Under-Review-->Recreation-->Outdoors-->Speleology-->Organizations-->Europe-->Ireland-->53
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