Irish-American Books


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Irish-American Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Irish-American
The Oxford Book of Death (Oxford Books of Prose & Verse)
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press, USA (2008-10-15)
Author:
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Oxford's official contribution to our demise
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-25
Enright should be given some sort of award by that lot over the Atlantic lake whom we broke ties with a little over 200 years ago. For his book on death is simply...beautiful. How he managed to cull so many varied and poignant accounts of and perspectives on death from literary (and non-literary) sources is nothing short of astounding. Of course, Enright has already won the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry. Is there also a gold medal for Death over there? If so, he is thoroughly entitled to it. It's rare that a literary work is such a page-turner as this one is. Everyone will have their favorite passages. My two are Bede's comparing life to the quick flight of the sparrow in through one end of the lord's hall and out the other in the twinking of an eye, with ignorance as to its plight both before and after; and the Ashanti saying, "Every time an earth mother smiles over the birth of a child, a spirit mother weeps over the loss of a child."-But, as I say, these are but two drops in an ocean of fine thoughts and sentiments and imaginings.-Recommended reading for all mortals!

The Oxford book of Death
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-15
beautiful book for those who ponder the realms and possibilities of death. Opens the mind to intense thought and imagination.

Irish-American
The Parallel Apocrypha: Greek Douay-Rheims King James Version New Revised Standard Version New American Bible New Jerusalem Bible Today's English Version The Holy Bible by Ronald Knox
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (1997-01-02)
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All the words fit to print
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-18
This Parallel Text volume by Oxford covers eight versions of the Apocryphal texts:

The Greek Text
The King James Version
Douay Old Testament
Holy Bible by Ronald Knox
Today's English Version
New Revised Standard Version
New American Bible
New Jerusalem Bible

What most people who hold fast to the King James Version of the Bible don't realise is that the Authorised Version of 1611 contained the books of the Apocrypha between the Old and New Testaments, and that these were later removed by printers and denominational/sectarian leaders for various reasons. Apart from Roman Catholic bibles in the United States, most bibles did not contain the apocryphal books, and Protestants in particular are only now coming to rediscover these hidden treasures. Indeed, the word 'apocrypha' comes from the Greek word meaning 'hidden things'.

The Apocrypha consists of 18 texts, books or additions to other books (such as Daniel or the Psalms). The ambiguity of their status comes from the disparity of ancient Hebrew versus Greek copies of the scriptures, the Judaic/Hebrew canon as opposed to the Septuagint. There are introductory essays (each only a few pages in length) that give the Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Anglican, Protestant and Evangelical views of the apocryphal texts, written by scholars from each of those traditions, which range from automatic acceptance/inclusion (Orthodox) to fairly clear rejection (most Protestant and Evangelical).

John Kohlenberger, the general editor of the volume, also includes an essay he wrote about the texts and translations. Kohlenberger includes a chart that shows the spectrum of deuterocanonical/apocryphal acceptance across the 'big three' lines of Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox; he also gives an introduction to sources of the English bible, discussion of the Vulgate and detail on each of the major translations incorporated.

All of these texts are included in this book, laid out in quadrant format, four to a page, with all eight texts/translations laid out in each two-page spread. Because of the space requirements, the text is very small, and there are few if any notes throughout the text (hence, while it is good for study to have the parallels, this is not in fact a study bible).

A good aid for scholars.

Finally an easy way to get a "complete" Bible
Helpful Votes: 24 out of 26 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-05
So often we act as if the only Bible canon dispute was between Catholics and Protestants. We leave the Orthodox with no complete Bible as the editions of "Bible with Apocrypha" have only the Catholic/Protestant books. This book includes texts for both Greek and Slavonic Orthodox and the one "appendix" accepted by the Greek Orthodox.

So the articles prefacing the texts are written as dogma rather than history or theology ... who cares? At least now I can have a truly complete parallel Bible for Bible studies.

Footnote: I am not Orthodox but some texts accepted only by the Orthodox as canonical appear as antiphons in Catholic liturgy.

Irish-American
A People Set Apart: The Scotch-Irish in Eastern Ohio
Published in Hardcover by Equine Graphics Pub (1999-05-01)
Authors: Lorle, Ph.D. Porter and Ph.D. Lorle Porter
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Well Done!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-23
Having grown up in Orange County, California I must say that the region discussed in this book is quite literally a world away. But I am drawn to it. My grandparents constantly told stories of the little college town of New Concord and how they met there after World War I and how they used to take long walks and swim in the lake there on summer evenings. Because of this book I have yearned to learn more about where my grandparents fell in love; to discover the town and the college and walks they used to take. I hear autumn there is something to behold. A great work of history that binds the generations together...

A thrilling read!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-16
This work is an amazing example of local history at its best. The author has done a wonderful job of weaving the story of a small town and of a region with the greater saga of the civil war. A delightful read!

Irish-American
Philanthropy in British and American Fiction: Dickens, Hawthorne, Eliot and Howells (Edinburgh Studies in Transatlantic Literatures)
Published in Hardcover by Edinburgh University Press (2007-12-15)
Author: Frank Christianson
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Brilliant analysis
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-18
Dr. Christianson approaches seemingly (in my mind) totally seperate topics and demonstrates how giving was influenced by contemporary literature and actually fed a class system in very many ways still in place today.

Well written and thought provoking

Makes me look at Philanthropy in a new way
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-17
Dr. Christianson does a great job of showing the relationship philanthropy and literature played in both England and America. A great read for the intellectual and neophyte alike.

Irish-American
Pieces of My Mind: Essays and Criticism 1958-2002
Published in Paperback by Farrar, Straus and Giroux (2004-09-06)
Author: Frank Kermode
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life/style
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-05
It's beautifully fitting that this collection of Kermode's essays begins with "Poet and Dancer Before Diaghilev." Kermode moves with balletic grace and alacrity through subjects ranging from Parisian salon culture of the '20s to Don DeLillo, often using the written word (Yeats, Stevens) as a point of departure for further critical and cultural adventuring. Pieces of My Mind is a pure pleasure from start to finish -- a generous testament to Sir Kermode's love and wonder for many, many things.

Fresh, sharp, at ease
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-03
Kermode's collection of essays demonstrates a brilliant mind scanning the diverse subjects to which it was led by curiosity and passion. As a literary critic, Kermode is an exemplar of the creative possibilities of theory-- rather than operating in one single mode, he adopts freely as he sees fit from a range of theoretical and disciplinary perspectives. These essays prove the value in a commitment to following personal interests rather than fashionable academic mandates and to wearing critical perspectives as a mask: for the sake of entertainment, flashes of enlightenment, and personal freedom. With a passion for literature, and for thinking about literature's bearing upon itself, Kermode writes beautifully and clearly. He carries literature beyond its own formal bounds, without subordinating it to 'larger', 'more serious' concerns (such as Philosophy, Politics or History) though acknowleding its interactions with these disciplines. More specifically, Kermode shows a consistent concern with hermeneutics and narrative as code, returning again and again to an interest in the New Testament that appears even before his well-known "The Genesis of Secrecy".

Irish-American
Plays for a New Generation
Published in Paperback by Global Authors Publishers (2003-04)
Authors: Karen Mueller Bryson and Karen Mueller Bryson
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A New Broadway
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-14
It's time that Broadway gets a new act..."Plays for a New Generation" is it! Ok, New York, this book is for you.., read these plays and get some new ideas. We are sick of seeing the same old stuff, why repeat and regurgitate the same old plays. Bryson has given us humor, real life, soul,pathos,emotion . Plays that you can sink you teeth into. How about it New York?.

Wonderful Anthology for Student Actors
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2003-05-12
"Plays for a New Generation" is a humorous anthology of five original plays written for a new generation of theatre-goers. The author is the award winning playwright and novelist, Karen Mueller Bryson. Often funny and always memorable, the plays in this collection include: Almost Thirty, But Does He Know Botticelli, Thazel Hoffstetter Lives Here, When Fat Chicks Rule the World, and The Story of What Happened When BeBe Romano Said She Was Having a Baby.

This is an excellent anthology for student actors who are encouraged to use the plays royality free for educational purposes.

Irish-American
A Polite and Commercial People: England 1727-1783 (New Oxford History of England)
Published in Hardcover by Oxford University Press, USA (1989-12-07)
Author: Paul Langford
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Erudite and highly readable survey of later Georgian England
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-02

First, a few words to place my remarks in context. I'm not a historian (I'm an economist), but I've long enjoyed reading general histories. Indeed, I've read the entire 15-volume Oxford History of England, a series now being replaced by the New Oxford History of which, I believe, "A Polite and Commercial People" is the first volume.

Not being a specialist, I'm in no position to comment on whether or not Langford's book is representative of recent thought on the period. He'll sometimes set out a position with which he disagrees, and then explain his reasons for coming to a different conclusion. In these instances his may or may not be a minority view, but at least he has set out the opposing position with what seems like clarity and fairness. I'm not sure I'd want him to do much more in what is, after all, a book for the general reader.

The "general reader" of old was, of course, notoriously well-read, and at times Langford takes advantage of this assumption. I don't actually have the book handy just now and so can't check chapter and verse, but I think it helps if, for example, you've already heard of Maria Teresa. The author doesn't have time to explain, and a few times I found myself having to make an educated guess but, in 725 pages, this happened quite rarely (a tribute to the author's organisational skill, not to my own reading).

Traditional political history takes up only three chapters which Langford spreads throughout the book covering, respectively, from the accession of George II to the fall of Walpole, to the end of the Seven Years War, and to end of the American War of Independence. I've no idea how innovative or otherwise Langford was in choosing categories for his other chapters, but he manages to make concepts such as "politeness" interesting and coherent enough to serve as their themes. It strikes me that, when political history first began to fall out of favour, it was replaced by rather dull stuff that focussed excessively on, say, education or the poor law. Yes, these topics are dealt with thoroughly in Langford's book but, somehow, he manages to organise and interpret his material in such a way that it has all the narrative virtues we old-fashioned "general readers" used to like in those political histories. (I know that must sound naive to a historian, but these reviews are meant to be helpful to others who might share my failings. Another naive confession: I can't resist drawing a great many parallels between the period Langford describes and, on the other hand, our own times.)

Throughout, the author's style is elegant, varied and energetic without ever seeming affected in the slightest. It is direct, but capable of considerable nuance. I'm a surprisingly slow reader for a person who reads so much, but this really was [cliche alert] a page-turner [/cliche].

Now that I've finished it, I still might not be able to pass a pop quiz on the Gordon Riots, say, or the War of Jenkins Ear. Still, I've been entertained and--if I can put it like this--enlightened by this first volume in the new Oxford series. Bring on fourteen more!

An outstanding survey of 18th century England
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-20
In 1934, Oxford University Press published the first volume in the "Oxford History of England" series. As subsequent volumes came out over the next 31 years, they came to serve as indispensable surveys of English history, the natural starting point for anyone interested in England's past and a powerful force influencing our understanding of it. Yet as the state of historical scholarship evolved, gradually the volumes became outdated in terms of their presentation and interpretation of the past. In response, Oxford launched a "New Oxford History of England" series, of which Paul Langford's book was the inaugural title.

In it Langford presents a wide-ranging history of England from the accession of George II to the loss of the American colonies. He presents the era as a chaotic one, with the country still coping with the consequences of the Glorious Revolution, which let a deep impression upon politics and society. Though the aristocracy remained the dominant group in many respects, the author sees the middle class increasingly coming to play a vital role in English life as the century progressed. In an age of commercial prosperity, their"polite" values increasingly contested with those of the upper class, setting the stage for their gradual assertion as the dominant segment of society in the century that followed.

Langford's book is an outstanding survey of Hanoverian England, one that draws upon an impressive range of scholarship. Though his main focus is on the politics and society of the period, very little escapes his coverage, as economics, art, and literature also are addressed within its pages. Though he presumes that his readers possess some prior knowledge of his subject (the mini biographies of people offered in footnotes in the old series are absent here), his analysis and arguments are clear and forcefully made. The understanding he provides of the era makes his book a critical resource on the subject, and a worthy successor volume to those from the venerable old series.

Irish-American
Post-Colonial Literatures: Expanding the Canon (Post-Colonial Studies)
Published in Paperback by Pluto Press (1999-10-01)
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Blackwell Publishers:
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-02
This collection of essays on the field of post-colonial studies, offers perspectives on texts from both sides of the Atlantic, challenging the emerging consensus on post-colonial literatures in the process. The contributors discuss a diversity of related topics, from case studies of specific authors to theoretical investigations of such fundamental questions as the role of literary study within multicultural societies.

A necessary book, and a great read
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-17
This book opened my eyes about the complexity of post-colonial studies, and finally defines it with examples from around the globe. It shows that post-colonial studies are really not just about the British colonies anymore, but applies to North and South America as well. It also shows that contemporary scholarship can be an exciting and entertaining read. I would recommend this book for students of literature and cultural geography alike. It should also be useful for anybody interested in environmental and social justice, and the continuing worldwide effect of centuries of colonization.

Irish-American
Reading Adoption: Family and Difference in Fiction and Drama
Published in Hardcover by University of Michigan Press (2005-09-23)
Author: Marianne Novy
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Reading Adoption: Just the book I was looking for!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-07
Who am I? Where do I come from? Where am I going? These labor intensive identity questions take a lifetime to answer. For adopted persons, sharing nature and nurture with two mothers and two fathers, responses are often more complicated. Fiction and drama involving adopted people have provided conscious and unconscious answers, advice and role models to deal with such complex family situations over the centuries.
In Reading Adoption: Family and Difference in Fiction and Drama, Marianne Novy, an adopted person who is a Professor of English and Women's Studies at the University of Pittsburgh, gives astute commentary about adoption literature from Oedipus to the novels of Barbara Kingsolver. As a sensitive memorist, Dr. Novy also reveals how adoption literature has enhanced and sometimes hindered her own search for self-definition. This author's goal is to "more of the next generation of adopttes to feel less alone" and to make adopted parents aware (through literature) of the stuggles necessary to meeting their children's needs.
If you love reading, if you are connected to the world of adoption, if you crave making connections between literature and drama and people's interior lives, this is the book you are looking for. As an English teacher and parent by adoption, I found it spoke directly to both my professional expertise and to my personal experiences. I applaud Marianne Novy for her fair, generous and interesting book, the work of a gifted scholar and mature daughter.

A breath of fresh air
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-12
Marianne Novy's "Reading Adoption" is a breath of fresh air in the dismal swamp of sentimentalism and sloppy journalism that characterizes too much of adoption literature, both pro-adoption and pro-adoption reform. Ms. Novy, a professor of English Literature and an adopted person, intersperses her own story with examples of adoption and illegitimacy in literature, from such diverse sources as Shakespeare, Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, Barbara Kingsolver, and Edward Albee. Her examples range from Tom Jones to The Diary of Brigid Jones, from Oedipus to Carol Schafer's Sacred Virgin. She discusses both familiar favorites, and those new to some of us that makes us want to look into them, or to look at old favorites with a fresh viewpoint.

Unlike many adopted persons who have written their stories, when Ms. Novy found her birthmother and family, she did not find soul mates or people with whom she had a great deal in common, even though she was welcomed and values the ongoing relationship she has with them. She wrote, " There are two simple views that public discourse about adoption falls into too easily. One is the view that only adoptive relationships matter; the other view is that only birth relationships matter. Some people have articulated a third viewpoint, that both matter but probably in different ways, that it depends on the circumstances, that adoptees have a choice about how to negotiate their identity and their relationships. But this approach still is not as widespread as it should be. I hope that this book, by analyzing places in literature where simplifications are found and places where they are transcended, will show more people how their world looks with a third view."

Marianne Novy admirably succeeds in doing this, and illuminates the tension between families, birth and adoptive, that is always there, and is always much more complex than the all-nature or all-nurture camps try to make it. She makes us all question our dearly held myths and icons. By not accepting without comment either the "forever family" fairytales beloved of many adoptive parents, or the reunion fairytales beloved of many birthmothers and adoption reformers, she makes all of us think, not just feel, and she stretches our imagination to encompass the complexity and diversity of adoptees and adoption as it is lived.

This is a groundbreaking book that should be read and discussed by all who are touched by adoption.

Mary Anne Cohen
Feb.2006

Irish-American
Roots of the Blackthorn Tree
Published in Paperback by Five and Dot (2002-01)
Author: Basil Douros
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Irish Heritage Explored
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-24
After reading Basil Douros' first book about his Greek heritage I could hardly wait to read Roots of the Blackthorn Tree, a story of his wife's Irish heritage. Although I am only one-fourth Irish I could relate to many of the experiences the poor Irish had to undergo when they moved to this country. I was raised in the Middle West with no running water and an outhouse about 50 feet from the main house. All 5 children took the Saturday night bath in the same large galvanized tub using the same water. These and other experiences going back to Ireland when it was invaded by the Celts are related in amazing detail. The Great Irish Potato Famine, which led to the large immigration of the Irish to the United States,is vividly described. Those who are descendents of the Irish who immigrated to Vermont will be especially interested in the living conditions described in that area of the country in the nineteenth century. The book was so interesting I read it in two evenings.
P.S. All my life I have heard the term shillelagh, not knowing where it originated or what it was used for. Now I know!

I was there.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-05
If you can work your way through a pint of Guiness Stout or sing a respectable Danny Boy--this book will warm the cockles of your heart.Mr Douros weaves an excellent presentation of Ireland's turbulent history from its origin and works his way to a rollicking climax of the activities of a group of present day Irish nestled in a remote section of Vermont that would make any Irishman believe he was back on the old sod.
Mr.Douros again has demonstrated his ability to get to the ROOTS of of any ethnic challenge presented him.Being a displaced irish Vermonter and very familiar with the subject matter,I enjoyed every page to the utmost.


Books-Under-Review-->Society-->Ethnicity-->Celtic-->Irish-->Irish-American-->23
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