The St Patrick's Treasury

The St Patrick's Treasury
Author: John Killen
Publisher:
Total Pages: 160
Release: 2015-11
Genre:
ISBN: 9780856409585

John Killen brings together the legends, folklore, traditions and stories that have been associated with St Patrick across the centuries.

A Guide to Irish Country Houses

A Guide to Irish Country Houses
Author: Mark Bence-Jones
Publisher: Trans-Atlantic Publications
Total Pages: 320
Release: 1996
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 9780094699908

Nearly 2000 Irish country houses are feature d in this book, each having an alphabetical entry describing it. Almost all the entries give information on the history and ownership of the houses; many of them are enlivened with anecdotes and details. '

Ordnance Survey Letters Meath

Ordnance Survey Letters Meath
Author: John O'Donovan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2001
Genre: Meath (Ireland)
ISBN:

"John O'Donovan's Letters are reports written from the field to the Superintendent of the Ordnance Survey, Thomas Larcom, discussing the English orthography of the names to be printed on the first edition of the Survey's maps. O'Donovan began work in Meath in July, 1836." -- back inside flap of dust jacket.

The Islandman

The Islandman
Author: Irene Lucchitti
Publisher: Peter Lang
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2009
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9783039118373

This book concerns Tomás O'Crohan of the Blasket Islands and offers a radical reinterpretation of this iconic Irish figure and his place in Gaelic literature. It examines the politics of Irish culture that turned O'Crohan into «The Islandman» and harnessed his texts to the national political project, presenting him as an instinctual, natural hero and a naïve, almost unwilling writer, and his texts as artefacts of unselfconscious, unmediated linguistic and ethnographic authenticity. The author demonstrates that such misleading claims, never properly scrutinised before this study, have been to the detriment of the author's literary reputation and that they have obscured the deeply personal and highly idiosyncratic purpose and nature of his writing. At the core of the book is a recognition that what O'Crohan wrote was not primarily a history, nor an ethnography, but an autobiography. The book demonstrates that the conventional reading of the texts, which privileges O'Crohan's fisherman identity, has hidden from view the writer protagonist inscribed in the texts, subordinating his identity as a writer to his identity as a peasant. The author shows O'Crohan to have been a literary pioneer who negotiated the journey from oral tradition into literature as well as a modern, self-aware man of letters engaging deliberately and artistically with questions of mortality.